Posts Tagged ‘China’

China Going for Clean Tech?

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Michael Standaert for the SF Chronicle reports that “China has environmental policies that are eons more progressive than in the U.S.”

In March, Beijing announced it would devote nearly $31 billion of its $586 billion stimulus package to “energy conservation and environment.” China also recently announced plans to spend $3 billion to subsidize the purchase of as many as 60,000 hybrid, electric and fuel-cell vehicles by 2012 for use in 13 major cities, including Shanghai and Beijing and provide subsidies of $8,800 to local governments that purchase electric cars for their fleets. The government has already ordered fuel-efficiency standards to jump from 36 mpg in 2008 to 43 mpg in 2009 in contrast to the current 25 mpg in the United States

“China is not waiting for anybody,” said Liu. “China has environmental policies that are eons more progressive than in the U.S. China has already made the decision to go green in full force.”

Coal, of course, is still the big killer, and despite progress of sorts being made in “clean coal” its contribution to climate chaning CO2 is enormous.

Good Article

Climate Work: US and China

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

In more promising news, Secretary of State Clinton is heading to China with climate and energy high on her agenda.

Todd Stern, the newly created special envoy on climate change for the United States, will be with Mrs. Clinton in China. In an e-mail message, he said a top goal is to end the endless sparring between the two giant sources of greenhouse gases over who needs to do what first.

“Secretary Clinton is keenly aware that the United States — as the largest historic emitter of greenhouse gases — and China — as the largest emitter going forward — need to develop a strong, constructive partnership to build the kind of clean energy economies that will allow us to put the brakes on global climate change,” Mr. Stern said. “We need to put finger-pointing aside and focus on how our two leading nations can work together productively to solve the problem.”

Revkin: Dot Earth

Geoffrey Lean at the Independent (UK) is positively giddy.

Maybe we are on the brink of one of those rare moments that transform the world for the better. For the Obama administration’s moves to forge a climate partnership with China offer much the best chance yet of averting the most serious crisis civilisation has faced.

Hillary Clinton’s visit to Beijing next week could prove far more important than President Nixon’s “China initiative”, which opened up the giant country to the world almost 40 years ago.

And a second article:

Hillary Clinton, his Secretary of State, is to raise the prospect of a “strong, constructive partnership” to combat climate change on a visit to Beijing next week, and the President is seriously considering a proposal from many of his most senior advisers to hold a summit with the Chinese leadership to launch the plan.

Last week, China’s ambassador to the US, Zhou Wenzhong, made it clear that his government would welcome “co-operation on energy and climate change” with the US. Such unprecedented teamwork would transform the world’s prospects for agreeing radical measures to combat global warming, and – senior Obama administration officials believe – lay the foundation of a new relationship between the two most powerful countries in the world.

Oh please please please let it be true….

And just for good measure, here is Bill Hewitt’s Climate Change blog at the Foreign Policy Association

New Hybrid Car Debut in China: Buffet and Investor

Monday, December 15th, 2008

“Battery maker turned car company BYD Co. has launched China’s first homegrown hybrid vehicle for the retail market, seeking an edge over its crisis-stricken international rivals.

…The vehicle can run up to 100 kilometers (62 miles) on its electric engine, and when it runs low on power shifts to a back up gasoline engine. Its battery can fully charge in nine hours from a regular electrical outlet, or much faster at BYD’s own charging stations, the company said in a statement.

The car will sell for 149,800 yuan ($22,000), about the same as many Chinese-made mid-sized cars, it said.

…MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., a unit of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., invested in a 9.9 percent stake in the company.”

B(uild) Y(our) D(reams)

E-Waste Dumping around the World

Monday, November 10th, 2008

An absolutely scandalous report from 60 Minutes about illegal e-waste dumping in China. We have posted stuff about technological dumping before but nothing quite this immediate and damning.

The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition is one place to turn to for more information, and action.

The NRDC, which has a spokesperson in the 60 Minutes piece, also has further information.

China Leads as CO2 Polluter

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

China Climate Chaos

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

The snow and cold in much of China over the past week has been sporadically in the news. It deserves more attention. Not only because of the dead, 24 on recent count, or the 78 million affected, or the hundreds of thousands stranded in railway stations, but because of what it is a harbringer of: climate chaos.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs estimates the direct economic cost of the weather so far to be $3.2 billion and the number of people affected to be 78 million, including 827,000 emergency evacuees. … the supply of coal for electricity had dropped to 21 million tons, less than half the normal levels at this time of year. As a result, 17 provinces were rationing power by Monday.

NYT

On the main highway between Guangdong, the manufacturing powerhouse of the south, and neighbouring Hunan province, more than 20,000 trucks and other vehicles were stranded, Xinhua said.

Among them was a man taking 10 children by bus to Guangdong to visit their migrant-worker parents.

“Today is our fifth day on the bus,” Tan Wenming told Xinhua. “Every day, we each get two packs of instant noodles to eat.”

Climate Chaos

“Snow in the south of China? Whoever would have imagined that?” said Yang Ailun, climate change campaigner for Greenpeace China.

China has a history of devastating natural disasters but the current harsh winter is the latest example of increasingly extreme weather as climate change progresses.

Average 2006 temperatures in China were the warmest in 55 years, while last year saw some of the worst regional droughts in decades, leaving huge swathes of farmland withered and rivers at record low levels.

China’s vast numbers of poor usually suffer the most from natural disasters, raising the spectre of weather-induced social unrest, Hong Kong professor Harris said.

“The people hit hardest are the poor and powerless. Climate change will just lead to more (social unrest),” he said.

Things to Come

China Drought

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Just thought you’d like to know…

The waters of the Yangtze have fallen to their lowest levels since 1866, disrupting drinking supplies, stranding ships and posing a threat to some of the world’s most endangered species.

Asia’s longest river is losing volume as a result of a prolonged dry spell, the state media warned yesterday, predicting hefty economic losses and a possible plague of rats on nearby farmland.

News of the drought – which is likely to worsen pollution in the river – comes amid dire reports about the impact of rapid economic growth on China’s environment.


142 Year Low