cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/3536782
China should set a “strong but achievable” target of slashing emissions at least 30 percent by 2035 when it submits updated climate commitments in coming months, a report urged Thursday.
Signatories to the 2015 Paris climate accord must announce by next February their updated roadmaps to achieve the treaty’s goal of limiting global temperature rises.
China currently aims to peak carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and reach carbon neutrality by 2060.
But its policies and targets are rated “highly insufficient” to limit global warming to 1.5 Celcius above pre-industrial levels, according to the Climate Action Tracker project.
The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), a think tank that tracks climate progress, said Beijing should aim for an absolute emissions reduction target of 30 percent.
As the world’s largest emitter, China’s “ambition in its climate agenda is decisive for keeping the international community on track,” CREA said in a report.
To meet that target, Beijing would need to slash electricity sector emissions by 30 percent and emissions from industry by a quarter. It should also set a target of reducing non-CO2 emissions by more than 35 percent, the group said.
[…]
But Teng Fei, deputy director of Tsinghua University’s Institute of Energy, Environment and Economy, called the “extreme” goal of a 30 percent emissions cut “too ambitious to be achievable”.
“I think China is in the process of stabilising its emissions, so it’s quite uncertain, for this period, to what extent China can reduce its overall emissions,” he said.
China is currently moving to bolster its flagging housing market, which could trigger higher demand in industry, and increase emissions.
[…]
Coal installation is continuing [in China] in a bid to secure baseload supply, and methane emissions are also rising.
[…]
The US has nearly fully abandoned all targets it has made, in contrast China has built more wind and solar capacity than the totality of us power capacity in the last ten years.
China’s doing fine.
This is the -unfortunately expected- whataboutism.
Additional renewable energy capacities do not compensate the harm done to the climate by carbon dioxide emissions, and China’s emissioin are still rising while it is already the world’s largest emitter as the report also says.
It’s not whataboutism, id recommend looking that up before using it again.
China is currently building more new renewable energy than the entire world is building new energy, combined, specifically so they can phase out coal and oil, eventually even LNG.
They’ve accomplished more than every other country when it comes to sustain nable energy capacity, and will continue to do so while the US increases it’s lead as actual top polluter per capita.
The renewable energy is one thing. China is the largest emitter of carbon dioxide, and emissions are still rising.
It’s blatant whataboutism as this report is on China, and it says the country’s climate emission policy is insufficient. Just read the report.
Unless you have information that isn’t in the article, it isn’t “doing fine” at all. It’s just not doing as badly as the U.S.
https://www.iea.org/countries/china/
Not a tanky or China apologist but it’s actually doing fine (not great but very well might be soon).
Here’s the information you’re looking for. China is doing a lot of things right and is ahead of schedule. They’re making good progress on electrification and their renewables are growing exponentially at an insane rate.
They’re still addicted to coal but with the developments in solar and wind and a very large geography and energy storage programs they’re going to be phased out and really fast in the coming years.
Given the fact that they’re pretty much producing everything for western economies and is recently industrialised China is actually doing fine. They emit a lot less per person than the average European while producing goods for 2x their population.
It might sound weird but China is one of the countries that’s actually taking climate change seriously.
Given the fact that they’re pretty much producing everything for western economies and is recently industrialised China is actually doing fine. They emit a lot less per person than the average European while producing goods for 2x their population.
From your own source, the EU emitted 5.6 tonnes per person in 2022. It doesn’t show per capita numbers for China, but it does show a total value of 10,613,171,000 tonnes for 2022. Divide that by 1.412 billion for China’s population and you get 7.5 tonnes per person
Consumption-based emissions, to account for the balance of imports and exports in China and the EU, do put Europe’s per-capita emission above China’s. But it’s by 10% in 2021, and the trend shows the gap narrowing year on year as China’s net emissions increase and Europe’s decrease.
The investment they’re making into clean power is great. It just doesn’t cancel out the simultaneous expansion of fossil fuel usage.