The worldโs most populous nation and one of its biggest polluters has thrown down the gauntlet ahead of next monthโs UN climate-change conference by saying richer countries like the U.S. have caused global warming and now itโs up to them to tackleย it.
China is already neck-and-neck with the U.S. in carbon emissions, mainly due to heavy reliance on coal and its massive 1.3 billion population. But as far as China is concerned, success at Bali depends on nations like the U.S. andย Canada.
China, anxious to sustain a runaway economy driven by car sales and energy consumption, has moved to deflect pressure to commit to mandatory emissions caps by stating that global warming is a problem for wealthy countries toย resolve.
In fact, one of Chinaโs Foreign Ministry officials said itโs important to have developed countries โcontinue to fulfill their obligations to reduce their gas emissions afterย 2012.โ
The Bali meeting is to lay the groundwork for a successor the current climate-change treaty, the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012. Kyoto set emissions targets for developed countries while exempting developingย ones.
The United States rejected Kyoto, saying it puts richer countries at a competitive disadvantage, and has called for a new agreement to include China and all otherย polluters.
Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is the only leader at the 53-nation Commonwealth meeting that has not fallen in line with a climate change resolution calling for binding targets to reduce greenhouse gasย emissions.
While China is set to overtake the United States as the biggest greenhouse gas emitter, its per capita emissions are still a fraction of those in the U.S. India, set to overtake China as the worldโs most populous nation, is also experiencing rapid growth in greenhouseย emissions.
No matter how legitimate the economic aspirations of China and India, emissions from their countries are as damaging as from the U.S., Canada, UK, Australia or anywhere else. It would appear Chinese leaders need to brush up on recent scientific studies as much as Harper and Presidentย Bush.
This doesn’t bode well forย Bali.
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