China will put a cap on annual energy consumption between 2016 and 2020 to promote energy saving, a draft outline of the country’s five-year development plan said on March 5.

China’s energy consumption will stay below 5 billion tons of standard coal, according to the draft outline of the 13th Five-Year Plan on national economy and social development, which is presented to the National People’s Congress annual session for review.

The country consumed 4.3 billion tons of standard coal of energy last year, official data showed.

China will push forward an energy consumption revolution in industries, construction, transportation and public institutions in the five-year period, and actively promote energy-saving technologies, the draft said.

Given a continued economic downturn, the country is seeking to make its economy grow in a cleaner and more efficient manner.

China aims to lower its energy consumption per unit of GDP by 15 percent by 2020, the draft said.

The country is also promoting the use of clean energy, including wind, solar and nuclear power, to restructure energy consumption currently dominated by coal.