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Climate Change and China Problems and Prospects Richard Louis EDMONDS [email protected] In 2000 China contributed 15% of world GHG emissions & could reach 30% of world GHG emissions by 2020 CO2 emissions 1950-2002 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Economic Development Population Growth & CO2 Emissions in China, 1971-2000 CO2 emissions per capita 2002 Sources of Chinese CO2 emissions, 2001 Sectoral Contribution to GHG emissions by country, 2000 What to expect by 2050 • Much depends upon China’s economic process unfolds • Population 1.5 billion (currently 1.3 billion) • GDP per capita US$10 000 (2005= $1 702 [PPP is higher]) • Total energy consumption 3.9-4.9 billion tonnes of coal equivalent (currently 2.3 billion tonnes) • Temperature increase of 2.2ºC • Precipitation increase of 7% • Yield reduction of rice, maize, wheat 37%- crucial for agricultural country like China (others give lower figure of 10%) • Increase in desertified lands What to expect by 2050 • 85% reduction of permafrost islands on the Qīnghǎi-Tibetan Plateau with a reduction of surfaces permafrost of 10-15% • Glaciers could reduce by 27% What to expect by 2050 Further shrinkage of inland lakes & drought • Coastal sea level rises & flooding – If oceans rise by 1 metre, coastal areas below 4 metres above current sea level would be flooded (an area the size of Portugal) resulting in the loss of much good agricultural land as well as submerging Shànghǎi & Guǎngzhōu & displacement of 67 million people • Fish yields would be reduced, especially in the Cháng River (Yángzǐ) valley • Heat wave increases - heatstroke • Infectious disease increases - malaria, dengue fever • Pest & weed increases What to expect by 2050 • Overall North China should get drier and experience great water shortages • South China should get wetter and experience flooding in coastal zones Not all ‘bad’ • • • • Forest productivity could go up Grassland productivity could go up River discharges could increase Agricultural production could grow in Northeast Energy use • 2005- 93% from domestic sources • More energy needed for air conditioning & cooling • “Renewable energy” will largely come from hydro-power with its own dilemmas • Nuclear, second most important element in renewables, may be a ‘colossal’ security threat Tourism • Nature reserve/scenic area disturbances from climate change & sea level rises could affect tourism • Qīnghǎi-Tibet Railway could be inoperable due to permafrost melt Government view of international relations • It is not reasonable to expect developing countries to maintain lower emission levels or install expensive equipment to control emissions on their own. Developed countries should take lead esp. after 2012 in line with compliance principles (put forward by MFA). – China also uses historical argument for lower controls. • 1994, China adopted its own Agenda 21 • China ratified the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (1994) as well as the Kyōtō Protocol (1997) but was classified as a developing country in both cases & had no binding emissions levels. – China angered by US withdrawal from Kyōtō. • 1998 National Coordination Committee for Climate Change created by State Council • NDRC in charge of climate change since 2003 • China released its own National Climate Change Program in June 2007. China, EU, US emissions cuts CDM project areas (part of Kyōtō Protocol projects begun in 2004) underway as of late 2006 • • • • • • • Renewable energy (greatest number 179 out of 255) Energy saving, efficiency and improvement Coal bed methane recovery and reduction Fuel substitution Chemical pollutant reduction (lower priority) N20 decomposition (lower priority) Afforestation/reforestation (lower priority) Government responses? • Climate change will remain secondary to pollution control which will remain secondary to growth. – In recent years worries about economic impact of related disasters drives climate change agenda. • Turn attention back to agriculture – Infrastructure improvements – Biotechnology include stress-resistance in seeds – Is talk of large scale plantation agriculture! • Continue flood & drought measures – Technical hydraulic improvements would continue – New codes incorporating climate change in construction Government responses? • Attempt to get local governments to face the climate change issue & take practical measures – Concentrate on provinces which it sees as sensitive to climate change (Qīnghǎi, Tibet, Níngxià) as well as the fossil fuel-intensive provinces (Shānxī, Liáoníng, Inner Mongolia, Héběi). • Re-vegetation – Continue forestry with emphasis on changing tree species in line with climate – Concerns for nature preservation, forest pest control, over-grazing, desert expansion. • Coast protection – Better coastal defenses for tide surge • Improve climate forecasting • Reduce energy intensity Energy Objectives (2050) Impact of economic loss • Most gains so far a result of higher energy efficiency rather than climate change reduction – To date efficiency goals have not been met – Reluctant to raise prices for energy or for industrial goods – Efficiency is now often being increased by shifting manufacturing to higher value goods & thus producing more value of goods per energy used rather than reducing amount of energy used. • Slowed growth • Poorer health Other economic impacts • But economic credits for taking on Clean Development Mechanism projects for greater polluting countries like USA under – China already has 49% of CDM credits generated world-wide • China will need to move to economic incentives instead of using top-down political commands • Water pollution investment versus air pollution/GHG investment? Impact- protests increasing since 2005 Political impact • Clamor for popular representation versus tightening of totalitarian controls • Increased control of local politicians from Běijīng & increased reliance on law? • Geographical break up of country? • Regional block development? • Continuation of so-called ‘one-child policy’? • Move to export emissions to other countries?