Monday, 24 August 2009

[From: tanikota tanikota] China's spiralling consumption is fuelling waste and pollution

tanikota tanikota spotted this on the guardian.co.uk site and thought you should see it.

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China Western Lifestyle Requires 2 Earths
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To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/aug/21/china-waste-pollution

China's spiralling consumption is fuelling waste and pollution

China's government and the domestic market are calling for greater spending. Economic growth may be maintained, writes Huo Weiya, but US-style living may mean we need another two Earths. From ChinaDialogue, part of the Guardian Environment Network

From ChinaDialogue, part of the Guardian Environment Network
Friday August 21 2009
guardian.co.uk


http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/aug/21/china-waste-pollution


To maintain an 8% economic-growth target through the current global financial crisis, the Chinese government has launched an investment stimulus package worth four trillion yuan (US$585 billion) and eased bank-lending restrictions. But another important measure is the increasing of individual consumption.

In 2008, the Chinese government launched "village appliance" schemes nationwide, with subsidies used to increase sales of televisions, refrigerators, washing machines and mobile phones in rural areas. Another two billion yuan (nearly US$300 million) was invested in 2009 in a "new-for-old" policy that will see individuals and businesses sell old appliances back to the state and receive a 10% subsidy on new purchases. Besides this, the automobile market is benefiting from subsidies and tax breaks, and many cities have handed out shopping vouchers to local people.

The export-oriented economy has been hard-hit by the economic turmoil, increasing the government's determination to make the domestic market the engine of growth. "Increase domestic demand, maintain growth" is seen as the secret to guiding the economy through hard times. But there are dangers hidden in this strategy, and there will be considerable environmental consequences if a long-term approach is not taken.

First, there is the issue of reusing resources. In China, it is not just rubbish that gets buried in landfill; many materials that could be reused also end up there. And once products have been used, they are treated as rubbish and thrown away. Any recycling that takes place is often the result of scrap collectors sifting through rubbish for the more valuable items; the rest goes to scrap or compost.

Increasing amounts of rubbish mean that many cities ? including Beijing ? are at risk of being surrounded by landfill sites and are turning to power-generating incinerator plants. This is controversial, with environmental bodies saying China should be sorting and recycling its rubbish. But China does not have a system for sorting rubbish.

When explaining the "new-for-old" policy, a National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) spokesperson said that it would see five million appliances replaced, while 90 million of the types of appliances mentioned above would be discarded annually. But the pervasive presence of scrap collectors throughout China's cities demonstrates that standardised collection and disassembly companies are not yet common. The sector is dominated by small, informal traders, and the environmental consequences of this already have already been covered in our earlier article "Low-carbon living begins at work".

The authorities released guidance alongside the "village appliances" and "new-for-old" policies, but with the recycling sector just getting started, it is unclear if the measures will be effective and if they will reach out into the rural areas.

In February, the State Council issued Regulations on Recovery Processing of Waste Electrical and Electronic Products, setting out the direction for the sector. But this only comes into effect in 2011. Until then, those small scrap merchants will be the main channel for recycling. They will purchase discarded appliances and then sell them on to companies unable to process them properly or to small, unregistered workshops.

The inadequate processing of waste doesn't just create pollution; it's also the cause of significant waste. According to the same State Council spokesperson, the new-for-old policy would see 2.3 million tonnes of resources collected for reuse. But without systems in place, much of that will be treated as garbage.

Another risk is the inflation of consumer expectations. A special feature on a well-known Chinese website, 21cn.com, recently described white-collar workers as the killers of the environment. The white-collar lifestyle involves high levels of consumption, and consumption is the natural enemy of the environment. In a poll on the website, the vast majority of those surveyed said that it is everyone's duty to protect the environment.

But despite these views, what actually happens is different. From July 1, hotels in the city of Changsha were no longer supplying items such as disposable toothbrushes and single-use tubes of toothpaste for free; they will be charged for. A survey on People.com.cn found 77% of respondents opposed the move, complaining of inconvenience.

These two surveys demonstrate the clash between ideas of consumption and environmental protection. Environmental awareness was non-existent three decades ago. Today, the environment is often the focus of public debate. But the Chinese seem to be becoming ever more like the Americans they so often point fingers at ? happy to protect the environment, as long as they don't need to change their lifestyles.

The "3R" principles of waste-management strategy are "reduce" (to minimise energy and resource use), "reuse" (to use an item more than once), and "recycle" (to process used items into new products). Reduction and recycling have been put into political and economic practice, but reuse -- the concept at the heart of the circular economy ? has been given the cold shoulder. Most consumers seem to have left environmental matters to environmental groups. As long as they can afford to, they'll consume as much as possible that is new.

China is placing more emphasis on its domestic market, with a range of methods applied to increase consumption and boost the economy, thereby making consumption seem ever more natural. With both the government and the market calling for greater spending, will China's potential consumption be realised?

The Chinese did not use to be heavy consumers, either because they did not have the funds or the lack of a welfare system meant they saved their money for a rainy day. But 30 years of economic growth have given us ample material desires ? a lifestyle of keeping up with the rich, keeping up with the Americans, has taken root. As soon as we are able to consume, we do so ? no less than the citizens of developed nations do. Economic growth may be maintained, but as the environmentalists warn, we may need another two Earths to meet the new US-style consumption of the Chinese nation.

? Huo Weiya is operations and development manager for chinadialogue in Beijing and former editor-in-chief of Environmental Culture Newsletter.

? This article was shared by our content partner ChinaDialogue, part of the Guardian Environment Network


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Friday, 21 August 2009

Aceh, Papua & Amazon link

Avoided deforestation credits head for the voluntary carbon markets

January 4, 2008 (ClimateChangeCorp.com) – Two Indonesian states determined to halt deforestation are getting ready to sell their forest carbon credits on the voluntary markets.

The Indonesian provinces are not prepared to wait for an international agreement on forestry, they want to start selling forestry credits on the voluntary markets now. The governors of West Papua province and Aceh signed an agreement with the governor of the Amazon region in Brazil at the UN post-Kyoto talks in Bali. They agreed to work together to preserve their rainforests and to help establish international funding to avoid deforestation.

200814122217_deforestation.jpg

A representative from Greenpeace pointed out at the signing that forested states were some of the most vulnerable to climate change: “The Amazon has seen droughts three years running,” he said. “Even the soya baron Blairo Maggi [a previous pioneer of deforestation for agriculture], who governs Matto Grosso state, has changed his tune.”

New line

The Forestry Eight, eight nations with 80 per cent of the world’s forest cover, successfully campaigned for the inclusion of forest preservation at the Bali conference last month. The result was an international agreement to pursue a programme called REDD, the Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation in Developing Countries, was included for the first time the UNFCCC post-Kyoto draft proposal.

Approximately 20 per cent of global carbon emissions derive from deforestation, according to scientific reports. “Previously, forests were never part of the Kyoto deal because climate change was seen as an issue to be dealt with by developed countries,” says Kevin Conrad, executive director for the Coalition for Rainforest Nations and environmental spokesperson for Papua New Guinea. Now that climate change has become more urgent, Conrad says, forested countries are seeing the potential to become part of the solution.

Although the details of how the REDD mechanism will work are still to be discussed by the UNFCCC, there are suggestions that forestry credits will be linked to the carbon markets to generate funds for forest preservation and alternative economic development in forested areas.

“The project basis of the CDM is unlikely to be adopted for REDD,” says Conrad, “because it doesn’t make sense to protect isolated parts of the forest from deforestation.” Conrad calls for allocations of carbon credits to be distributed to national governments by the UN in return for decreasing rates of deforestation.

Target the loggers

National deforestation plans are still not watertight, however. There have been concerns that although Brazil’s deforestation rates have decreased year-on-year, the illegal loggers have moved to targeting Peruvian forests instead. “We will have to build incentives into the scheme to encourage all forested nations to join and keep the loggers out,” says Conrad. Details of the plan will be firmed up at this year’s UNFCCC talks in Poland.

Meanwhile, Indonesia’s West Papua and Aceh have taken matters into their own hands, with governors promising to halt deforestation, only harvesting a few trees in a sustainable, and more profitable way. Governor of West Papua, Barnebus Suebu, complained that previous logging activities in West Papua province had generated only 10 dollars per log for the local people, while traders sold the logs on for thousands of dollars.

Money matters

Carbon market investor Carbon Conservation Pty Ltd, led by Dorjee Sun, a 30-year-old Australian who became a millionaire by developing internet software, intends to find the funding to help Suebu’s conservation plans become a reality. Sun hopes to sell carbon credits on from avoided deforestation in West Papua and Aceh on the voluntary markets once a national deforestation baseline has been set by the Indonesian government. Sun hopes to persuade mining company Rio Tinto Ltd, a previous buyer of Carbon Conservation’s avoided deforestation credits, to invest in his new venture for West Papua and Aceh.

The Indonesian states are testing the water in a new realm of voluntary carbon offsets that promise to become big business. First, however, forested nations need to convince investors that they have the power to stop illegal logging over the long term.

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Tuesday, 18 August 2009

[From: tanikota tanikota] Asia facing unprecedented food shortage, UN report says

tanikota tanikota spotted this on the guardian.co.uk site and thought you should see it.

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sumur pompa['jet pom']
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To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/17/asia-facing-food-crisis

Asia facing unprecedented food shortage, UN report says

Major investment in irrigation systems needed to feed population expected to grow by 1.5 billion over next 40 years

John Vidal
Monday August 17 2009
The Guardian


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/17/asia-facing-food-crisis


Asia faces an unprecedented food crisis and huge social unrest unless hundreds of billions of dollars are invested in better irrigation systems to grow crops for its burgeoning population, according to a UN report published today.

India, China, Pakistan and other large countries avoided famines in the 1970s and 1980s only because they built giant state-sponsored irrigation systems and introduced better seeds and fertilisers. But the extra 1.5 billion people expected to live on the continent by 2050 will double Asia's demand for food, says the report from the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Bank-funded International Water Management Institute (IWMI).

A combination of very little new land left for cultivation, an increasingly unpredictable climate and water supplies stretched to the limit means the only realistic option to feed people in the future will be better management of existing water supplies, according to the report.

"There is no new land or water to develop so we have to make more use of what we have. Existing irrigation systems are often 50 to 70 years old. They are leaking and water is evaporating. We urgently need a new generation of irrigation. That is the only way we are going to feed everyone," said Colin Chartres, who is the director general of IWMI.

"If we don't [invest] we will see food crises like the one in 2007 repeated over and again. That was an early warning. If nothing is done, you are going to get an increase in social unrest, migration and a fertile ground for terrorism," he said.

Since the demise of communism and the rise of the free market, farmers have increasingly opted to take irrigation into their own hands, mainly using cheap Chinese-made pumps.

Tens of millions of smallholders have invested in their own pumps so that they can extract water from shallow aquifers whenever they choose. Governments have been unable to regulate this practice, which has led to major exploitation of water resources.

Water tables in parts of India and China have dropped catastrophically in the last few years. "It's a trend that will become more common. The consequence will be more farmer suicides, hardship and collapsing enterprises," said Chartres.

The food crisis is compounded by millions of wealthier people in developing countries turning away from traditional rice and cereal-based diets to western dairy and meat-based foods that require more water, says the report.

"The agriculture of tomorrow will need a lot more water. Given that one litre of water is used to produce one calorie of food, the world will need up to 6,000 cubic kilometres of additional water every year to feed another 2.5 billion people 2,500 calories per day.

"This is almost twice what we use today and is not sustainable," said Chartres.

The report urges countries to repair and modernise irrigation systems and use better drip-fed farming. The UN expects the world to have an extra 2.5 billion mouths to feed within 40 years, most of them in developing countries. Africa's population could double, Asia's could grow by nearly 30% and Pakistan's by 85%.


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