Assessing China’s Green Lights Program

‘Green Lights Program,’ established in 1996, was to promote energy efficiency in lighting due to expected increased demand for the electricity system in China and resulted in environmental and economic benefits. The program’s success can be attributed to five key factors discussed in this paper.

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For the past 20 years a programme of the Chinese government has been aimed at reducing electricity consumption and facilitating the provision of efficient lighting to consumers, thereby reducing pollution and potentially the demand for new power plants. This programme – the ‘Green Lights Program’ was established in 1996 to promote energy efficiency in lighting due to expected increased demand to the electricity system. Scientists working on the CD-LINKS project have recently published a paper that assessed the impacts of the program and how successful it was. The full paper is available from here and was featured as a Research Highlight in Nature Energy’s journal available from here.

The Green Lights Program resulted in not only environmental benefits but also economic benefits to China and was assessed in the paper by a set of indicators, including electricity savings, consumer savings, production capacity expansion, and export income.

Lead author of the paper, Fei Guo from International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), says: “A unique feature of China’s Green Lights Program that contributed to its considerable success was the strong alignment of energy efficiency and industrial development objectives. This resulted in the policy achieving benefits for people’s pockets, the economy and the environment. This aspect of the policy might provide useful lessons for other developing countries.”

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The programme prioritized policy focuses in stages: 1) Stage I (1996–1998) focused on raising the awareness of the general public on ‘high-efficiency lighting products’; 2) Stage II (1999–2006) aimed to promote and regulate the quality of domestic lighting products; 3) Stage III (2007–2010) targeted expediting the diffusion of compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) by means of financial and mandatory incentives; and 4) Stage IV (after 2010) started to shift the previous program priority from CFLs to emerging light-emitting diode (LED) lighting technologies.

The success of the program can be attributed to five key factors:

  • Strong and sustained government commitment
  • Prioritised policy focus by: raising awareness, enforcement of manufacturers to improve product quality, subsidy programmes by the Chinese government and the utilisation of new technologies
  • Extensive efforts on product quality control
  • Successful combination of energy efficiency policies with industrial development policies
  • Combination of distinct and varying incentives

The program helped shape the interdependence of energy efficiency policies with industrial policies. In its conclusions the paper notes that several challenges are evident that the programme needs to address in its next phase. These findings might be of interest to other developing countries who can learn from the experience obtained by the Chinese government in the implementation of its Green Lights Program.


This article is an output from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 642147 (CD-LINKS).

CD-LINKS

CD-LINKS is a research project that brings together a consortium of nineteen leading international research organizations from around the globe to explore national and global transformation strategies for climate change and their linkages to a range of sustainable development objectives. An important question for policy makers, in the G20 and beyond, is how to bring climate action into the broader sustainable development agenda. Objectives like energy poverty eradication, increased well-being and welfare, air quality improvement, energy security enhancement, and food and water availability will continue to remain important over the next several decades. There have been relatively few scientific analyses, however, that have explored the complex interplay between climate action and development while simultaneously taking both global and national perspectives. The CD-LINKS project will change this, filling the critical knowledge gap and providing much-needed information for designing complementary climate-development policies. The project aims to have a pronounced impact on the policy dialogue, both nationally and internationally: an important outcome of the project will be a list of country-specific policy recommendations for effectively managing the long-term transformation process. These recommendations will point out opportunities for policy synergies and at the same time respect political and institutional barriers to implementation.

Project details

  • Project title: “Linking Climate and Development Policies – Leveraging International Networks and Knowledge Sharing” (CD-LINKS)
  • Funding scheme: European Union Horizon 2020 Programme (EU H2020, grant agreement no. 642147)
  • Duration: 4 years (1 September 2015 – 31 August 2019)
  • Project coordinator: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria
  • Project website: www.cd-links.org