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Inside NRDC
Photo of Frances Beinecke
THE VIEW FROM NRDC


The China Syndrome

A powerhouse economy is learning to lighten its carbon load

This spring I traveled around eastern China with staff from NRDC's new Beijing office. I fully expected the murky air and the urban landscape jammed with factories and power plants. But I was still stunned by the enormous scale and pace of change. In the six years since my last visit, Beijing's streets have become clogged with cars -- not bicycles, as before. Construction that began only last year on a new, 17-mile subway line will be completed by the 2008 Summer Olympics. We traveled south to tour the port of Shenzhen, which 30 years ago was a sleepy town; now it is the fourth-largest port in the world.

China is paying a steep price for this rapid growth. More than 400,000 Chinese die each year from pollution-related illnesses. Just a few years ago, experts predicted that by 2020 China would overtake the United States as the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases; newer projections say that will likely happen this year. Neither the Chinese people nor the rest of the planet can survive this onslaught. But here's what gives me hope: China's leaders understand the environmental crisis and are quickly putting greener policies into place.

I saw signs of this everywhere we went. In Nanjing, we met with provincial leaders who offer financial incentives to businesses to buy energy-efficient factory machinery. The program -- which NRDC helped design -- is about to go nationwide. In Beijing, we learned that China's State Council had recently announced that it will evaluate the job performance of provincial governors and the heads of China's 1,000 largest enterprises based on how well they curb energy usage.

China has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of wrenching poverty. Millions more aspire to a higher quality of life. But China's powerhouse economy is generating pollution and inefficiency similar to what our industrial boom created 100 years ago, only at a much greater pace and on a much broader scale. Thirty-five years ago, on Earth Day, we began to clean up the legacy of our growth, but the planet simply cannot wait decades for China to do the same. We have to use our experience and China's ingenuity to do it better and faster this time -- to break the link between economic growth and environmental destruction. Much of China's pollution is generated by factories producing the goods we buy in the United States every day; we bear some responsibility for helping to clean up the pollution that we've outsourced.

NRDC is working with Chinese officials and dedicated citizens to help the country reach both its economic and its environmental goals. The progress they make will benefit not only China but the entire planet.

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Frances Beinecke
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"LED BY CALIFORNIA, 31 states representing more than 70 percent of the U.S. population announced Tuesday that they would measure and jointly track greenhouse gas emissions by major industries.... 'You have to be able to count carbon pollution in order to cut carbon pollution," said Frances Beinecke, president of [NRDC].
-- From "31 States to Track Global Warming," Los Angeles Times, May 9, 2007

"WAL-MART STORES INC. will lower the amount of mercury in high-efficiency compact fluorescent bulbs it sells.... 'People concerned about the environment and their health can buy these CFL's with a clear conscience,' Noah Horowitz, senior scientist with [NRDC] said."
-- From "Wal-Mart Cuts Mercury in CFL Bulbs," Business Week, May 10, 2007

"THE SUPREME COURT REBUKED the Bush administration April 2, 2007, for its inaction on global warming in a decision that could lead to more fuel-efficient cars as early as next year. '[T]his administration's legal strategy for doing nothing has been repudiated,' said David Doniger, counsel for [NRDC]."
-- From "High Court Rebukes Bush on Car Pollution," USA Today, April 2, 2007

"TXU, THE TEXAS ENERGY GIANT, announced Monday that it had agreed to be taken private by a group of investors... for $45 billion in what would be the largest leveraged buyout in history.... To secure the support of [environmental] groups, the bidding consortium agreed to scale back significantly on TXU's controversial plan to build 11 new coal plants.... Frances Beinecke, [NRDC's] president, called it 'a big step forward for the state of Texas and the American energy economy as a whole.' "
-- From "In TXU's $45 Billion Deal, Many Shades of Green," New York Times, February 26 , 2007






Photo: Erin Patrice O'Brien

OnEarth. Summer 2007
Copyright 2007 by the Natural Resources Defense Council