俺站在人类命运共同体的立场之上!

R
Royale2020
楼主 (文学城)

几十年,中国做牛做马,污染了自己。中国制造2025,不就是追求富裕的么。

Why we’re all to blame for China and India’s ‘filthy’ CO2 emissions Smog over the Chinese city of Yantai.   -   Copyright  Götz Friedrich from Pixabay

By Marthe de Ferrer

Updated: 06/02/2021

It feels as though every time there’s a new study about the US or EU needing to reduce carbon emissions, there’s a voice which pops up and asks ‘but what about India and China?!’

From anonymous accounts on social media to global leaders, pointing the finger at these two particular nations has become a common retort when discussing the need for climate action.

During the second US presidential debate last year, Donald Trump was challenged over his decision to leave the Paris Agreement. He responded by declaring, “Look at China, how filthy it is! Look at Russia, look at India - it’s filthy! The air is filthy!”

Though Trump has long complained about India and China’s carbon emission levels, he’s not the only one peddling this rhetoric. In February 2020, Canadian politician Peter MacKay said “we’re not the problem,” before going on to suggest that if the entirety of Canada stopped using electricity and driving, it wouldn’t make any difference to global emissions.

There is undoubtedly truth in the fact that India and China are both major emitters, with China responsible for 28 per cent of carbon emissions and India 7 per cent, ranking them first and third in the world.

But is the argument that simple? Not quite…

Outsourcing western emissions

When a country’s carbon emissions are calculated, only carbon emitted within that country is typically counted. These are known as ‘territorial emissions.’

On the surface that seems like a logical way of tallying things up, but in reality it distorts the truth.

Countries in the Global North, the USA, UK, Japan, France and Germany in particular, are increasingly outsourcing key parts of their industrial processes.

Consider how many items you own which say ‘Made in China’ or clothes you’ve bought which were manufactured in India; the emissions involved in those products’ creation would have been counted as China and India’s responsibility.

In 2012, China emitted 1.6 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide making products which were exported elsewhere. That’s around 16 per cent of the country’s total, according to the Global Carbon Atlas.

Steel production, for example, specifically accounts for around 10 per cent of China’s CO2 emissions. That’s a significant contributor, but perhaps less surprising when you learn that half the world’s supply of steel is manufactured in China.

There’s no denying that China’s carbon footprint is substantial, with the coal industry representing around three-quarters of emissions. And it’s clear that, along with the rest of the world, it needs to move towards more sustainable power sources. But - the significance of other countries’ reliance on China for manufacturing is an oft-overlooked factor which needs addressing too.

This isn’t a new angle either. France’s Climate Action Network published a study in 2013 which looked at the issue of ‘imported emissions’. The group, along with many others, have been calling for greater emphasis to be placed on consumption-based emissions. These would consider the carbon footprint of imported goods and deduct the emissions of exported goods.

The group have been calling for greater emphasis to be placed on consumption-based emissions.

This approach is believed to more accurately “reflect the consumption and lifestyle choices of a country’s citizens”.

Using consumption-based metrics, China and India’s respective output would drop - albeit not hugely, but enough to reflect the burden being placed on these countries. This is true for much of the Global South, which is increasingly being used as a way of outsourcing carbon emissions.

The problem is even more serious when looking at air pollution specifically. In a 2014 study of China’s air, it was found that a fifth to a third of pollutants - including carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides - were related goods produced for export. Plus, at least 20 per cent of those pollutants were specifically linked with trade to the US.

So while Donald Trump is right, the air is filthy in China, the responsibility for that pollution is equally murky.

Size matters

It’s also important to note that China and India, of course, have the two biggest populations in the world. In fact more than a third of the entire planet (36 per cent) lives in those two countries combined.

Given that the two nations produce 35 per cent of CO2 emissions, it’s clear that by capita, the responsibility is lower - even without adjusting for consumption-based emissions.

In fact, when you look at per capita emissions worldwide, China and India are both well down the list.

The worst offenders are, perhaps unsurprisingly, major oil producers like Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE.

Out of more populous countries, it’s Australia and the US which are out in front, producing 16.88 tonnes and 16.16 tonnes of CO2 per person respectively in 2017. That’s significantly above the global average of 4.8 tonnes per capita.

China, on the other hand, generated just 6.86 tonnes per person and India only 1.84 tonnes.

Leading in green innovation

India in particular gets unfairly tarred by the rhetoric around carbon emissions. According to Climate Action Tracker, India is one of just five countries (and the only G20 nation) with policies compatible with the Paris Accord target.

Wind power has been a major focus for the country, which, as of September last year, had reached 38 gigawatts of wind power capacity. That places India as fourth in the world, behind China, the US, and Germany.

Currently nearly 40 per cent of India’s electricity comes from renewable sources, and though 2020 put the country’s transition to clean energy on hold, it’s still moving in the right direction.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said at a UN Climate event last December that he believed his country would likely exceed the Paris Agreement goals.

“India has reduced its emission intensity by 21 percent over 2005 levels,” said Modi. “Our renewable energy capacity is the fourth largest in the world. It will reach 175 gigawatts before 2022.”

India is world-leading when it comes to wind power.Canva

In both China and India grassroots environmental movements are also gaining impressive traction. But these victories are often omitted from the narratives being expressed about both countries.

“The narrative that the Global South is uninterested in initiating the transition is also blatant erasure of local and national mobilisations in these countries,” says environmental campaign group Friends of the Earth.

“In these countries, where people have been experiencing climate change and environmental disasters for decades, strong movements of resistance are mobilised to demand change from leaders.

“In China urban communities are rising against air pollution and winning important victories. In India, local movements fight the coal industry and deforestation.”

No country is currently on track to reach the 1.5C goal, so everywhere in the world still has a significant way to go in terms of adequately addressing the climate crisis. But in order to truly mitigate global warming and the ecological emergency we’re facing now, there is little to be gained from misleadingly shifting the blame onto other nations.

加州耍猴人
直接说:站在习近平的立场上不就完了吗
R
Royale2020
Look at China, how filthy it is! 川大领统如是说。制造2025不正是使中国的空气变得香甜的么?
加州耍猴人
香甜不香甜没人知道;但是利用政府垄断资本来和自有资本竞争同时抢占制造业的制高点---这大概人人看得出
U
Uusequery
"人类命运共同体"有点像画在墙上的大饼。Utopia
R
Royale2020
钢业,碳排放占中国总排放的10%,而同时,中国提供世界50%的钢铁。
R
Royale2020
发展高端制造业,中国为何不能发展?非洲人如今能流畅地视频通话, 中国万岁!
U
Uusequery
更大头的排放为世界提供了什么?
R
Royale2020
拿你自己来说,你开的车,你有自行车的话,你用的种花种菜的工具,你用吗?
R
Royale2020
你住的房子所用的钉子来自哪儿?别说你住的是老房子。
加州耍猴人
你可以发展,但是不能坏了规矩:中共

政府的独裁方式使得它们可以集中垄断资本来弄死西方民主国家的自由资本---这是破坏规矩的行为

加州耍猴人
提供世界50%的钢怎么了?
R
Royale2020
美国公司的资金,有来自股债,有来自政府的投资;在资本用于运用发展上,没有任何的不同!
R
Royale2020
金山银山,不如青山,不如绿水。
加州耍猴人
你把话说明白,不要总是引用没有前后文的老习讲话稿
加州耍猴人
那就没办法了,你党认为“没有不同”,自由资本世界认为“坏了规矩”,谈不拢就争,就打吧
加州耍猴人
价值观体系的不同,会导致双方针对同一个事物的认知不同,这种不同往往很难存在调和余地:汉贼不两立
R
Royale2020
毛主席早就指明了方向:我们的目的一定能够达到

 

一键而已
政治口号而已
加州耍猴人
你真行。你属于那种只是单纯宣传,基本上不对自己宣传内容做出解释的家伙。
U
Uusequery
这是钢铁,10%的排放。是最大的单项排放?
b
bluesky231
世界各国对中国的承诺给与高度赞扬,特朗普却让美国退出了巴黎协定,与全球气候治理方向背道而驰,连盟友都深感不满。
星辰大海541
好霸道啊,这话不像自由民主世界的,倒像殖民时代的。你不买我的鸦片那就打。应该通过自由竞争堂堂正正的赢对手,再说了,你说打就打了,
星辰大海541
汉贼不两立?你家邻居比你有前途,你不想着怎么改变自己去超过他,就拿枪把他干掉。可以做到,但你也玩完了。
星辰大海541
UU说的没错,中国的路数都是必须勤勤恳恳去工作,利润极低,哪有华尔街敲键盘和在白纸上画绿钞来的容易来的快,俺们美国人已经养成巧取

豪夺,干轻活或不干活挣大钱的习惯了,先辈们能吃苦实体经济碾压全世界,俺们不想干了,就吃老本了,谁敢超俺俺就开枪干掉他

不具体
还没见过这么疯狂叫嚣要灭掉自己母国和种族的货。
5
547788
中国是我的祖国。如果习的做法对祖国有好处,我不反对站在习的立场
5
547788
公平的话,应该人均排放一样
b
brotherbear
目前这确实是个大饼,但是是人类最终的归宿,不然怎样,大家一起扔蛋蛋同归于尽吗?
b
brotherbear
留个位置俺站你这边,猴人,你不是一直要立场吗,这就是。
b
brotherbear
是口号没错,要干成一件事就得有口号有纲领,旗帜鲜明。
b
brotherbear
实在过不下去,脱钩就脱钩好了,为什么一定得你死我活呢?
老柏树
这一点我举双手赞成,没必要你死我活
加州耍猴人
很好,很坦率
加州耍猴人
你祖宗埋在中国了,是吧?你和你的子孙后代埋在哪里?
加州耍猴人
中共的终极目标,就是消灭资本主义。从这个角度上说,共产中国一直在准备灭掉美国--请你搞清楚哟
b
brotherbear
你双手举起来也才一张选票,干不过华尔街啊!老共现在这么有钱,总会有人折腰的。
星辰大海541
呵呵,假如你有个女儿,嫁出去了,是不是就带着婆家人拿着枪扛着炮,打回娘家,这个家教有点奇葩。
星辰大海541
你告诉大家用二百颗核弹怎么能灭掉8000颗核弹的国家,脑子没病想不出来