China begins transition to a clean-energy economy
A common refrain from climate action naysayers is that, "China is building two coal-fire power plants a week."
A common refrain from climate action naysayers is that, "China is building two coal-fired power plants a week!"
They insist that the United States should wait until this major emitter takes on binding commitments to climate change mitigation before it decides to adopt global warming pollution reduction policies in the American Climate and Energy Security Act (H.R. 2454).
They further claim that if such a bill became law, the United States would be transferring its jobs to countries such as China and India that are doing nothing to curb emissions.
But that thinking is exactly wrong.Critics fairly point to the fact that 80 percent of China's power is derived from dirty coal, and that China recently surpassed the United States as the word's largest emitter of carbon dioxide.
Yet China's per capita emissions remain a fifth that of the United States, and its historical cumulative per capita emissions from 1960 to 2005 are less than one-tenth that of the United States.
Still, the Chinese have recognized that it's climate inaction-not climate legislation-that will lead to its own economic undoing. As the U.S.
Congress debates the merits of enacting renewable electricity and energy efficiency standards, China has already forged ahead with building its own low-carbon economy, laying the foundation for clean-energy jobs and innovation.
China ranked second in the world in 2007 in terms of the absolute dollar amount invested in renewable energy, according to the Climate Group.
It spent $12 billion, which put it just behind Germany's $14 billion. These investments have placed China among the world leaders in solar, wind, electric vehicle, rail, and grid technologies.
And now approximately 9 percent of China's $586 billion economic stimulus package will go toward sustainable development (excluding rail and grid) projects.
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