Xie Zhenhua was born in Tianjin. During the Cultural Revolution he was put to work in the countryside.[2] Specifically, he was among the millions of “sent-down youth” who were dispatched to the countryside to retrain their minds through hard labor, and for this Xie was sent to Heihe in the northern province of Heilongjiang.[3] Xie joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1969.[4]
Xie's role has been positively received among many foreign politicians and climate change activists, as he has been a driver behind China signing binding commitments to reduce emissions. Xie is seen as "China's voice on climate change".[7] He has emphasized China's stance that rich countries have a greater responsibility regarding climate change than China, though China has been the world's largest carbon emitter since 2006.[3] His speech at the 2010 climate conference in South Africa conveyed this Chinese position:[2][7][9]
We are developing countries. We need to develop and eradicate poverty while protecting the environment. We’ve done what we should do, but you [developed countries] haven’t. What right do you have to lecture us?
Xie worked with former California governor Jerry Brown to establish a new center for California-China climate cooperation at University of California, Berkeley.[12]: 108 During his time as climate envoy in the 2020s, he befriended John Kerry, his American counterpart, before his retirement.[6]
Xie retired in January 2024 for health reasons. He was replaced by former Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs of China Liu Zhenmin.[13]
^Lewis, Joanna I. (2023). Cooperating for the Climate: Learning from International Partnerships in China's Clean Energy Sector. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. ISBN978-0-262-54482-5.