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"The pollution of the atmosphere by greenhouse gases lasts much longer, and emissions from one place immediately become part of a global problem."
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by Gerd Leipold
China is waking up to its looming environmental crisis.
In the first week of 2008, Greenpeace and sohu.com asked Chinese netizens to vote for the top ten environmental stories in 2007. More than 10,000 people cast their votes, and topping the list was “Rising consciousness among the Chinese public to have a say in environmental affairs”. The news concerned was the public opposition to a billion-dollar chemical factory in Xiamen, a beautiful seaside city in the Southern province of Fujian. Worried about the environmental and health impacts of the chemical plant, thousands of local residents protested in the street in last June. The protest forced the Xiamen government to carry out environmental impact assessment and public hearing, and finally decided to relocate the factory.
Some hailed the drama in Xiamen
as a victory for the environment and the public. For the more than 100,000 Xiamen residents living
within five kilometers of the selected site of the chemical plant, the
relocation must have come as a relief. But underlying China’s environmental awakening is
the tragic fact that a growing number of people are now literally living with deadly
pollution or in the fear of an environmental disaster.
Two years ago, a committee set up by the National People’s Congress
concluded that China’s
environmental situation was chu mu jing
xin – “whatever meets the eye is shocking”. This is probably the strongest
words one can say of the environmental crisis. Top Chinese officials often
are careful in choosing words, and when they use strong words, the situation
must be truly worrying.
From the voices in the street to the words of Chinese top officials,
environmental awareness is gaining momentum. But the question is whether the
positive force gathered from change in attitude and behavior can manage to reverse
the current trend of environmental deterioration?
What needs to be done to cure China’s environmental ills? Let me illustrate
by another major
environmental news in 2007. While Xiamen residents took to the streets in protest,
one of the largest fresh water lakes in China, Taihu Lake in Jiangsu province,
was experiencing the worst ever blue-green algae outbreak, which polluted 80%
of the water supply in the nearby city of Wuxi. The outbreak was caused by
years of unchecked industrial pollution and increase use of chemical
fertilizers, and triggered by warmer weather due to climate change.
Can China
bring its industrial pollution under control? Can the central government impose
its well-intended environmental regulations on local officials? Can China stop its addiction to
chemical agriculture? Can China
power its economic growth with clean and renewable energy, rather than with
coal and other fossil fuels, which emit climate-killing greenhouse
gases?
None of this is a small task, especially if one considers the size of China
and the fact that it is still a developing country. But if China fails to address these
issues, the consequences will be even more shocking than today.
Apart from the scale of the problem, there is the time factor as well.
It takes a long time to clean up pollution. The Chinese government has invested
billions to clean up the Hui
River with limited
success. Responding to criticisms, Zhou Shengxian, the head of the State
Environmental Protection Administration, recently used an old Chinese
saying to describe the clean up efforts: “Illness comes like a landslide but
goes like reeling silk from a cocoon”. And he is right. The more we pollute
today, the longer it will take to clean it up.
The problems caused by river pollution are local and they
can be stopped locally. It takes about one or two decades to clean up a
polluted river, if the right measures are adopted. However, the pollution of
the atmosphere by greenhouse gases lasts much longer, and emissions from one
place immediately become part of a global problem. Scientists say that to
prevent the worst consequences of climate change, we need to limit global mean
temperature increase to under 2° Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels.
Failure to do so means that the world may cross the tipping point of no return.
It is not my intention to begin writing for a new column in
the new year with apocalyptical warnings. Like the people who voted for the top
ten news in 2007, I see hope in the fact that Chinese are increasingly
concerned about the state of the environment, and in some cases, even taking
actions to fight for a clean environment. Nothing can stop the dragon when it
wakes up – this is an old Western cliché, but this is what many feel after
witnessing China’s
economic and political emergence in the last two decades. Let’s hope China’s
environmental awakening will reverse the spin of history before it is too late.
New
year wishes often fall victim to inertia and inaction. We better make sure this
one does not.
(The author is International Executive Director of Greenpeace.)