State Council approves demonstration projects for sustainable development
In January 2025, China’s State Council approved the Implementation Plan on Building Pioneer Demonstrations for a “Beautiful China”, a policy framework issued by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment (MEE). The plan outlines pilot initiatives designed to integrate environmental protection with economic development, with the stated goal of establishing scalable models for ecological modernization by 2027.
While framed as a contribution to the national “Beautiful China” initiative, a longstanding slogan-oriented strategy aimed at environmental sustainability, the new Implementation Plan consolidates regional pilot projects into a more structured national programme. It introduces a range of instruments, including land-use controls, ecological zoning, and low-carbon transition measures, but leaves questions open regarding enforcement mechanisms and stakeholder participation.
Strategic regional focus and environmental governance
The Implementation Plan prioritises coordinated action in four key areas: the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei metropolitan region, the Yangtze River Delta, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area, and the river basins of the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers. Each region is tasked with developing policy innovations that reflect both ecological challenges and regional development objectives.
- In the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, proposals include enhanced legislative coordination and pollution control measures, such as zero-emission freight corridors.
- In the Yangtze River Delta, the plan promotes joint regional action on pollution control and carbon reduction, while also encouraging the establishment of a new “ecological green demonstration zone.”
- The Greater Bay Area is expected to pilot internationally-aligned environmental regulations and low-carbon finance mechanisms.
- The plan calls for improved ecological governance in the Yangtze and Yellow River Basins, including restoration measures and biodiversity protection.
Differentiated provincial implementation
The plan proposes that around five provinces will test differentiated implementation models tailored to local contexts. These are expected to integrate carbon intensity regulation, land-use reform, and ecological zoning outcomes. Resource efficiency is also highlighted, with a focus on waste recycling and renewable energy adoption. The plan suggests a more adaptive, decentralized approach and prioritises air, water, and soil pollution control.
Urban-rural linkages and the role of local governments
The plan identifies about 50 cities and 100 counties for pilot demonstration. In urban areas, efforts will center on infrastructure improvements, ecological community development, and land use optimization.
In rural areas, the “Ten Million Projects” experience—originally from Zhejiang Province—is cited as a guiding model. The plan aims to scale up village revitalisation and environmental remediation. The rural component also mentions surface pollution management and spatial planning reform.
Links to the Urban-Act Project
Several objectives of the Implementation Plan align with the international Urban-Act project, particularly in areas of urban resilience, low-carbon planning, and environmental governance. The proposed demonstration zone in the Yangtze River Delta—an Urban-Act participant—could serve as a testbed for climate-sensitive infrastructure planning and cross-sectoral integration.
The success of these linkages will depend on how well the Implementation Plan integrates with broader climate policy frameworks, including China’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and whether local pilot projects are able to inform national strategies with transparent, evidence-based outcomes.
Link to original policy: