extracted from:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/pf/67860047.htmlStefan Lovgrenfor
National Geographic NewsMay 16, 2005
China's spectacular economic boom may be inflicting a terrible toll onthe global environment, a new study warns.
According to Vital Signs 2005—a new report by the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based environmental nonprofit—China is now driving the consumption and production of almost everything, threatening to deplete the world's resources.
"China is becoming the sucking force, taking raw materials from across the planet, because it alone doesn't have the resources it needs to sustain its growth," said Lisa Mastny, the project director of the new study.
It remains to be see what long-term effects the Chinese boom will have on the world's raw materials. But it is clear that China's own natural resources—its air, land, and water—are already suffering terribly.
China is in the middle of the largest rural migration in human history, with millions of its people leaving for mushrooming cities. With factories multiplying and car ownership surging, the cities' air quality has plummeted.
Sixteen of the 20 most polluted cities in the world are in China. The country is the second largest emitter of carbon dioxide after the United States.
"China's economic boom is dramatically changing [its] environmental landscape—polluting the water and air, desertifying the land, and diminishing the country's natural resources at terrifying rates," said Elizabeth Economy, the director of Asia Studies at the New York City-based Council of Foreign Relations.
But there is some hope, experts say. Recognizing the escalating costs of pollution, the Chinese government has, for example, introduced strict fuel-economy standards for new cars. It has also enacted a renewable-energy law that sets ambitious targets for using wind and solar energy.
Consumer NationThe world economy expanded in 2004 at a rate of 5 percent. According to the report, China's economy grew by a staggering 9 percent.
Economic reforms have undoubtedly benefited hundreds of millions of Chinese people, providing them with a better standard of life. The boom has also turned China into a huge market for companies worldwide.
China is still a manufacturing giant. It now produces 27 percent of the world's steel, an essential input in industrial infrastructure. Steel production has increased by one-third in the last five years.
But China is now also one of the world's largest consumers, straining already limited resources and pushing prices up. China increased oil consumption by 11 percent in 2004 and is now the second largest oil consumer after the United States.
Mastny says some 240 million Chinese people are now in the consumer class, buying the type of goods and services that most people in Western nations purchase. While that number is the same as in the United States, it represents only 19 percent of the total Chinese population.
"The potential number of Chinese people who could become consumers in the future is enormous," Mastny said. "Think about what that means in terms of availability of resources and the environmental impact.
"Take cars, for example. In the 1980s there were virtually no private cars in China. In 2003 there were 14 million. In 2015 China will have an estimated 150 million cars.
"This is unsustainable," Mastny said. "We're not blaming China. It's just that if all the countries that are entering the consumer society try to emulate the patterns of the United States and other countries, clearly there is not going to be enough [resources] to go around."
Acid RainsChina's economic boom has come at a steep cost to its environment. Land needed for industrial development is quickly being gobbled up. China has about 20 percent of the world's population, but only 7 percent of the world's farmable land. At least a fifth of the country is already desert.
Scores of rivers have dried up in northern China over the past 20 years. More than 75 percent of river waters are not suitable for drinking or fishing.
China's cities are an environmental disaster, since urban infrastructure has not kept up with the influx of people. Many cities face serious sanitation problems, with sewage and wastewater going straight into rivers.
Large cities, including Beijing, are smothered in smog. Old and weak people are often warned to stay indoors. Between 2001 and 2020 almost 600,000 people in China are expected to suffer premature death every year due to urban air pollution.
Much of the air pollution stems from China's overwhelming reliance on low-quality, high-sulfur coal as its main source of energy. Coal makes up almost three-quarters of the country's energy needs. Acid rains that fall on 30 percent of China's cities are blamed on the burning of coal.
"Public health, social stability, and continued economic growth are all at risk as China continues to pollute its way to prosperity," said Elizabeth Economy, of the Council of Foreign Relations. Economy is the author of The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge to China's Future.
China also has a significant impact on the regional and global environment. The burning of coal is responsible for about half of the world's sulfur dioxide emissions and causes acid rains throughout East Asia.
"We even see huge brown clouds of sulfur making their way across the ocean," Mastny, the
Worldwatch Institute project director, said. "The haze in L.A. is not just from L.A. anymore."
Amanda's Commentary:
This is also another article talking about how has China's economic development affect the environment as well as the natural resources of the world. This article has shown how China's development has caused pollution in their quality of air, water and also other countries such as L.A. This article has also shown the 'consumption paradox' that most developing countries are facing. As most countries aim to have sustainable development, it is diffcult when it has to consumed a lot of resources and even though they have measures to curb the pollution, the fact still remains that the earth's natural resources are still depleting. Other thing to note is that China's international relations with other countries if their pollution problem still continues. This might affect their trade with countries as they might face condemnation as with their human rights issues. This issue would be especially significant with the upcoming Olympics in August as the world watches how China deals with issues and events happening in the country.
Amanda (07A102)
Labels: amanda (07A102), Environment, Politics
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