China
feels emissions heat
China,
the world’s largest producer of carbon dioxide, is directly feeling
the man-made heat of global warming, scientists conclude in the first
study to link the burning of fossil fuels to one country’s rise in
daily temperature spikes.
12
April, 2013
China
emits more of the greenhouse gas than the next two biggest carbon
polluters - the US and India - combined. And its emissions keep
soaring by about 10 per cent per year.
While
other studies have linked averaged-out temperature increases in China
and other countries to greenhouse gases, this research is the first
to link the warmer daily hottest and coldest readings, or spikes.
Those
spikes, which often occur in late afternoon and the early morning,
are what scientists said most affect people’s health, plants and
animals. People don’t notice changes in averages, but they feel it
when the daily high is hotter or when it doesn’t cool off at night
to let them recover from a sweltering day.
The
study by Chinese and Canadian researchers found that just because of
greenhouse gases, daytime highs rose 0.9 degree Celsius in the 46
years up to 2007.
At
night it was even worse: Because of greenhouse gases, the daily lows
went up about 1.7 degrees Celsius.
China
is the world’s biggest producer and consumer of coal, which is the
largest source of man-made carbon dioxide emissions.
While
the country has made huge investments in alternative energy such as
wind, solar and nuclear in recent years, its heavy reliance on coal
is unlikely to change any time soon.
About
90 per cent of the temperature rise seen by the researchers could be
traced directly to man-made greenhouse gases, the study said.
Man-made greenhouse gases also include methane and nitrous oxide, but
carbon dioxide is considered by far the biggest factor.
The
study appeared online in late March in the peer-reviewed journal
Geophysical Research Letters.
The
study uses the accepted and traditional method that climate
scientists employ to attribute a specific trend to man-made global
warming or to rule it out as a cause.
Researchers
ran computer simulations trying to replicate the observed increase in
daily and night time high temperatures in China between 1961 and
2007. They first plugged in only natural forces - including solar
variation - to try to get the heat increase. That didn’t produce
it.
The
only way the computer simulations came up with the increase in daily
high and low temperatures that occurred was when the actual amounts
of atmospheric heat-trapping greenhouse gases were included.
‘‘It
is way above what you would expect from normal fluctuations of
climate,’’ study author Xuebin Zhang of the climate research
division of Canada’s environmental agency said.
‘‘It
is quite clear and can be attributed to greenhouse gases.’’
China
did not become the largest emitter of greenhouse gases until 2007;
for much of the period studied, it had a smaller economy.
Because
carbon dioxide stayed in the atmosphere for about a century, China
and its defenders maintained that the US and other developed nations
bear more responsibility for climate change.
Outside
experts praised the research as using proper methods and making
sense. An earlier study didn’t formally blame the proliferation of
US heat records to a rise in greenhouse gases but noted that they
were increasing substantially with carbon dioxide pollution.
‘‘The
study is important because it formalises what many scientists have
been sensing as a gut instinct: That the increase in extreme heat
that we’ve witnessed in recent decades, and especially in recent
years, really cannot be dismissed as the vagaries of weather,’’
said Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann.
China
has rapidly grown from a nation of subsistence farmers at the end of
the 1970s into the world’s second-largest economy behind the US,
and the environmental costs of such change are often visible.
Beijing
is no longer dominated by bicycles but by cars, and the skyline is
barely visible at times because of thick pollution.
More
people are living in cities, buying air conditioners and other
energy-hungry home electronics and consuming more energy for
transportation and heating.
China
passed the United States as the No. 1 carbon dioxide emitter about
six years ago and ‘‘the gap is widening, it’s huge,’’ said
Appalachian State University professor Gregg Marland, who helps track
worldwide emissions for the US Energy Department.
When
developed countries around the world in 1997 agreed to limit their
greenhouse gas emissions, developing countries, including China, were
exempted.
US
Energy Department statistics said that China gets 70 per cent of its
energy from coal, compared with 20 per cent in the United States.
China
is also a world leader in the production of cement, a process that
also causes greenhouse emissions.

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