China Aspires to be an Environmental Leader: How Should the Rest of the World Engage?

Tyler Harlan, Yixian Sun*, Juliet Lu, Jessica DiCarlo, Coraline Goron, Yifei Li, Jessica C. Liao, KuoRay Mao, Jesse Rodenbiker, Deborah Seligsohn, Alex Wang, Niklas Werner Weins, Annah Lake Zhu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

China has transformed from a laggard to a rising leader of environmental governance. It plays a unique and essential role in promoting environmental cooperation, financing and implementing global green infrastructure, and generating and disseminating environmental technology and scientific knowledge. On each front, global progress cannot be made without China, especially with the US’ retreat from global leadership under the second Trump presidency. In this article, we consider China's concrete, multifaceted environmental efforts over the last decade and show China's various motives: it is partly responding to critiques of its massive environmental footprint; partly pursuing greater respect as a responsible global power; and partly seeking economic and political gains through clean energy transition, a greener planet, and a more stable climate. We call for new approaches to engaging China's aspiration to become a global environmental leader, while asserting clear expectations and responsibilities in that role.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1
Number of pages17
JournalJournal of Current Chinese Affairs
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Dec 2025
EventAssociation for Asian Studies Annual Conference - Seattle, United States
Duration: 14 Mar 202418 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • China
  • global leadership
  • environment
  • climate change

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