Posts tagged with "environment"


Anyone looking for a lesson in both climate change and sustainability (持续性 chíxùxìng) needs to visit China. In a country full of contradictions or 矛盾 (máodùn), it only makes sense that some of the worse environmental degradation is contrasted by very progressive attempts at conservation and sustainability wherever possible.

China is unique because nowhere else in the world (with a possible exception of India) have we seen such a large population transition from an agrarian society into an industrial one in a mere 30 years (following the Open Door Reform Policy-改革开放 gǎigékāifàng). It’s been truly remarkable watching the speed and efficiency in which China has pursued a path of economic development or 经济发展 (jīng jì fā zhǎn) and ave gobbled up FDI or 以进养出 (yǐjìnyǎngchū). As a result GDP or 国内生产总值 (guónèi shēngchǎn zǒngzhí) has hovered between 9 and 10 percent and is expected to maintain a steady 8 percent for the next decade. To put it plainly, China’s economy is very 厉害 ( hai)。

But what many eastern philosophies such as Taoism (道教) teach is that contrary forces are often interconnected, much like the 阴阳 (yīn and yáng). As one expands or exerts itself, the other reacts in order to seek balance. With industrial manufacturing and agriculture comes CO2 emissions and pollution and degradation of arable land–all detrimental impacts on the Chinese environment. China’s environment or 环境 (huánjìng) has been taking one for “the team” for a long time. But now it appears the costs of ravaging one’s environment are now spreading to businesses, industries and society in general:

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While the numbers do range among Chinese and Western scholars, most predict that the negative externalities associated with environmental degredation (such as land loss, health costs due to air, water, food quality, etc…) remove a substantial chunk of China’s GDP when factored into long term growth (estimates run from 4%-10%, begging the question: is this model sustainable for India and Africa in the future?).

Anyone who’s breathed in air from a major Chinese city or experienced a sandstorm or a “fog advisory” knows just how evident the environmental degradation is in China. Yet, amidst the smoke stacks, coal mines and toxic rivers there’s a silver lining: people are recycling, conserving and developing low cost, common-sense practices and technology to mitigate their environmental impact.

Before my first visit to China, I was unaware of how wasteful westerners (especially Americans) are. In China, electricity and heating are often rationed or decided by strict governmental regulation. Water use, or lack there-of is met with rebates while electricity is self-monitored (bought on rechargeable cards much like cell phones) which really does keep you energy efficient. No light or computer is ever left on when the house is empty and if you live in a northern locale, be prepared to wear many layers or even your jacket while inside the house. It really is a society of “less is more” when it comes to natural resources or 自然资源 (zìrán zīyuán).

What really amazes me about China has to be the recycling or 回收 (huíshōu). While there isn’t really a government run recycling entity as in western countries, it is carried out to near perfection by Chinese citizens looking to scrape together a few bucks. (Click here for previous post on Recycling.) The best part is, anyone can reap the rewards of a recycling economy.

For example, in China (anywhere) you can return around 5-8 bottles of beer to get one free–and all you’d have to do is go outside your apartment to the local market and trade them in. As a result, I took to collecting bottles myself (see below).

Yet if you want to see recycling in full force, there will be at least one recycling hub in the city (our local 老外s deemed it “Apocolyptopolis”) where people make a living obtaining, buying, selling and trading all kinds recycle-able refuse. Here, people are “going green” simply because it makes fiscal sense.

In essence, this is what real grass roots environmentalism is. After talking to a few ”entrepreneurs“ or 企业家 (qǐyèjiā), they explained to me how the costs of materials for plastics and glass are increasing, so selling back recycled goods has a higher price with the same baseline cost of labor and time.(See below: This was just one week’s haul for the self-espoused 企业家人).

Just as the market leaned on the environment, the environment is leaning back on industry, providing cheaper alternatives to non-sustainable growth. Clearly the two are highly interconnected, the question is whether or not China will be able to rebalanced itself in time, finding harmony between industrialized growth and sustainable development before the damage becomes irreversible.

GDP and the environment are now interlinked. China’s future will be determined by how the two find balance with one another.

 

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In China, you’ll find some of the most pristine and most polluted places on the world. Due to the huge land mass and area of China, it becomes difficult in defining a singular environment. Here’s a compilation of photos taken from all over China during the past 4 years.

While the debate on climate change rages on, and many western nations begin looking toward alternative forms of renewable, green energy, one thing is for sure: China is leading the green charge. You may find it interesting that one of the most polluted countries in the world is also the “greenest” in terms of renewable resources, but thats the way it goes when you try to industrialize a population of over 1 billion people in just a few decades. There are a multitude of factors and reasons why China has gravitated toward the renewable energies sector which I will detail below, but the overriding theme I’ve discovered is quite simple: China doesn’t like to waste or 浪费 (làng fèi) anything.

On my first visit to China in 2006, I was quickly introduced to the the concept of “waste not, want not” from day one. Fancying myself an avid environmentalist throughout high school and college, I thought I had already trained myself to recycle, conserve and cut down on my green house gas emissions with great efficiency. In years prior, I studied abroad in Taiwan, but was quick to notice the prevalence of garbage and smog producing automobiles, excessive light displays and a lifestyle that seemed quite similar to that of the United States, namely, consumption driven. My thought was that I could put my environmentalist tendencies to good use in the mainland…boy was I wrong.

In the mainland, my host family monitored every energy or resource-using activity I did. I couldn’t leave my computer on when I wasn’t using it. I could only flush the toilet after a 大便 ( biàn)  or “number 2″, but was urged to leave my 小便 (xiǎo biàn) or “number 1″ in the toilet (in the US we have a phrase if it’s yellow let it mellow…). Heat and AC were almost never used, unless the temperatures fell below freezing or soared above the 90′s in Fahrenheit (30 degree C) requiring me to wake up in a pool of sweat during the summer months and wear layers upon layers of thermals and long underwear, coats and even blankets when in the house during the winter. Plus we recycled everything, including mounds of  lined-paper completely filled with my 汉字 (Hàn ) or character scribbles from class. Even old clothes that had holes in them later became “mops” and “rags” by my frugal host mom.

All that "trash" is being recycled by ”green entrepreneurs" who know it will fetch a fair price at market.

"One man's trash is another man's treasure."

What was most interesting about this fervent attempt at conservation were the motivations behind it. My host family wasn’t really doing it for the environment, and they were well enough off to afford the ridiculously cheap electricity and water bills that are partially subsidized by the government. They were simply doing it because anything else would be wasteful. It was both admirable and telling about the culture. It wasn’t a “green culture,” but rather a highly pragmatic one.

When I returned the next summer to Shaolin, I was quick to notice that nearly every building in Deng Feng had a solar-thermal water heater on top of it. When I returned to Beijing, green buildings touting Lead-certified architecture had sprung up everywhere. China was starting to go green for environmental reasons now. People were equating the terrible smog, sandstorms and monsoons as a product of industrialization and now they wanted to fix it. This is namely because on June 4th, 2007, China enacted its first National Action Plan on Climate Change, and became the first developing country to publish a national strategy addressing global warming. Clearly the environment was becoming a hot topic.

Then a summer later in 2008, prior to the Olympics, Beijing embarked on a multitude of policy prescriptions, including a mitigation of construction and coal/steel plants, the planting of forest corridor on the outskirts of the city (to stop the encroaching desert) and even policies of alternating between odd and even numbered license plates (called 单双) to limit air pollution caused by traffic. In just a couple of years, a concept of “Green China” had emerged and was now being articulated.

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Fast forward to the present and what do you see? China is now both the largest producer of greenhouse gases and CO2 emissions along with the world largest producer of renewable energies or 可再生能源 (Kě zàishēng néngyuán).  China is the industry leader in many renewable technologies such as wind and solar, yet has increasingly toxic water supplies and land loss. If this trend continues coupled with China’s huge work force and focus on engineering and technology accumulation, China will be the dominant the global green industry, while the domestic population chokes on the lingering effects of industrialization. China is a nation of immense problems and pragmatic solutions, the question is whether or not one can balance the other, or if the Chinese environment will reach a “tipping point”.

Unfortunately this is a typical visibility in the majority of large Chinese cities.

While I cast the future of China’s green industries quite optimistically, this does not mean that China is free from a plethora of environmental and security concerns that threaten to cripple the country in decades to come. Many economists and scientists have claimed that China’s rampant GDP growth, when weighed against the long-term negative externalities of pollution, land and water loss, put actual GDP growth as just a few points over zero, or in some situations, actually believe it has had a negative GDP effect.

To be brutally honest, China will feel the effects of the environment on its balance sheet in the years to come, as incidents of cancer will vastly increase (due to air pollution, chemicals and tainted food/water supplies), land-productivity and desertification will diminish water and food supplies, and growing demand of fossil fuel based energies will suck up supply and cause energy costs to skyrocket. Yet unlike most countries, China is actually doing something about it, and fast, creating a sustainable industry that allows for sustainable growth and development. The Green Dragon is on the rise.

More than any other city in any other country on earth, Beijing is a bicycle town. It is home to more than 10 million bikes and is accommodating to its bikers. Every road has a wide, sometimes very wide, bicycle lane on each side, and Beijingers make sure that the space is used. At all hours of the day, but especially for the several hours each morning and evening that comprise rush hour, bicycle lanes throughout the city are swarmed with riders. Riding a bike in China is not at all about being an environmentalist. You don’t ride for your health, or to make a statement. Since the days of the revolution, the Chinese ride because they need to get places.

Of the 100 million bicycles produced in the world every year, over a quarter of them are produced in Tianjin, a city about an hour’s train ride southeast of Beijing. While the city itself does not have much to offer, in the cyclist’s mind, it does produce at least one glorious product: the Flying Pigeon (Feige) bicycle. Fifty pounds of iron with rod brakes and little stopping power, the gearless Flying Pigeon was once the most ubiquitous bicycle in China. Deng Xiao Ping, Mao’s successor and the architect of China’s transition from a purely socialist command economy to a “socialist market economy” himself made the Henry Ford like declaration “A Flying Pigeon in every household” to showcase what economic progress had in store for the Chinese people. The company complied, offering the bike in any color you like, so long as it’s black. The Flying Pigeon’s chief competition, the Forever (Yongjiu) brand bicycle, looks very much the same: large tires, fenders, chain guard, kickstand, irritating bell, back package carrier, and handlebar basket. Together, the two brands serve to clog the bicycle arteries of Beijing and other biker friendly cities throughout China.
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