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CLIMATE CHANGE-CHINA: Racing to Be World's Leading Polluter By Antoaneta Bezlova BEIJING, Apr 25, 2007 (IPS) - China has delayed the release of a long-expected
national plan on tackling global warming amid warnings that the country is
set to overtake the United States as the world's biggest source of
greenhouse gases (GHGs) this year - much earlier than forecast - because
of its runaway economic growth.
It is the second time this month that Chinese officials have deferred the
release of the anticipated public information. Earlier national
statisticians delayed the publication of quarterly data about the country's
economic growth, announcing consequently that China's growth has increased
unexpectedly by 11 percent in the first three months of 2007.
The new increase comes on the heels of breakneck annual economic expansion
of more than 10 percent for four straight years, which has seen China
rapidly emerge as the fourth largest economy in the world.
The problem with China's transformation into an economic powerhouse
however, is that it is fuelled almost entirely by highly polluting coal.
Burning coal and other fossil fuels release GHGs such as carbon dioxide,
which are believed to cause global warming. Last year the country burnt
more than 1.2 billion tonnes of coal and has ambitious plans to build a
series of new coal-fired power plants to continue its economic expansion.
Chinese statisticians are not the only ones taken by surprise by the
country's raging economic growth. The International Energy Agency (IEA),
which advises developed countries on energy policies, has had to revise
its projections regarding China too.
Analysts had predicted earlier that China's emissions of GHGs would
surpass those of the U.S. by 2009. But, in the light of China's
astonishing economic performance of last year and the first three months
of 2007, the IEA now believes this is going to happen within months.
What is more, if those emissions are left unchecked, in 25 years China
would be emitting twice as much carbon dioxide as the richest developed
countries together, according to IEA's chief economist Dr. Fatih Birol. By
then China's pollution could outstrip any gains made elsewhere in the
world.
"(In 25 years) carbon dioxide emissions, which come from China alone, will
be double the carbon dioxide emissions which will come from all the OECD
countries put together - the whole U.S., plus Canada, Europe, Japan,
Australia and New Zealand," Birol was quoted as predicting this week.
The deferred national "action plan" on climate change is expected to
promise emission cuts but no carbon caps, which limit carbon dioxide and
other gases linked to global warming a country can release.
Such caps are perceived by Chinese leaders as costly measures because
they may stifle economic growth, which they regard as paramount in
maintaining social stability. So far, Beijing has refused to consider any
preventive steps that could hobble economic expansion and lead to social
unrest.
Instead of trying to cap GHG emissions, China's leaders are
trying to reduce energy intensity, the amount of coal and other fuels the
country burns relative to economic output. Chinese academics say this will
be the keystone of the new "action plan" on climate change.
China is a signatory to the 1998 Kyoto protocol which obliges developed
nations to limit their GHGs output, but as an emerging nation it is exempt
of mandatory limits.
However, China's continuing trajectory of economic boom means that without
its control of emissions any attempts to moderate global warming in future
will be meaningless.
"Without having China on board, no international climate change policy has
any chance of success at all," Birol said. "Without China playing a
significant role, all the efforts of every other country will make little
sense. It is terribly important."
Beijing has given contradictory signals to its willingness to be a full
participant in future global efforts to fight climate change.
During a visit to Tokyo earlier this month, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao
announced that his country was prepared to participate in talks on a
future framework to curb global warming emissions to replace Kyoto
protocol provisions that expire in 2012.
But Beijing has also signalled that rich industrialised nations should
take
the lead in cutting GHGs since they bear the responsibility for
causing global warming. Chinese officials argue that per capita emissions
in
China are much lower than in the West and climate change is an
accumulative
result of long-term emissions of developed countries.
According to Qin Dahe, expert on climate change who retired this month as
head of the China Meteorological Administration, Chinese per capita
emissions in 2000 were just 0.65 tonnes per person - one-fifth of levels
in
the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
countries.
Beijing has also expressed scepticism about the soundness of some
scientific
claims on global warming. China, along with the U.S. and a few other
countries, has challenged assessments presented in a draft report at a
U.N. climate change meeting in Brussels this month. The report was
approved after some climate warnings were toned down.
In another development China has also questioned the need for climate
change
to be regarded as a security threat. During a U.N. Security Council
meeting last
week, China rejected calls by Britain to discuss the potential for climate
change to cause wars and conflicts at the most powerful U.N. body.
"The developing countries believe that Security Council has neither the
professional competence in handling climate change - nor is it the right
decision-making place for extensive participation leading up to widely
acceptable proposals," Liu Zhenmin, China's deputy ambassador said.
The official 'China Daily' went even further in suggesting there were
ulterior
motives behind the proposal to discuss climate change at the U.N. Security
Council of which China is one of the five permanent members.
"The call for the international community to address climate change is
sensible, but sensationalising it as an issue of security is
conspiratorial," the paper said in an editorial Tuesday.
But despite Beijing's reticent official attitude on climate change,
Chinese
leaders are aware that rising temperatures present a danger to China as
they
threaten its continuous economic development - the very thing they have
been
trying to protect by warding off mandatory carbon caps.
A new report prepared by Chinese scientists and published last weekend
paints a bleak picture of China where climate change will mean larger
deserts, severe droughts and reduced water availability. Rising sea-levels
and deadly typhoons could also threaten the affluent Chinese east coast.
Perhaps the scariest possibility of all is the impact that rising
temperatures could have on China's food security. The country would face
an uphill battle to feed its 1.3 billion people if water scarcity and
droughts reduce its crop production by up to 30 percent as predicted in
the next 20 years.
(END)
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