CO2
emissions are being 'outsourced' by rich countries to rising
economies
Greenhouse
gas output of China and elsewhere is increased by making goods that
are then used in the US and Europe
Jinhuarun
chemical plant in Zekou Town, Qianjiang City of Hubei Province,
China. A draft UN report says the west is increasingly outsourcing
its carbon pollution to China and other rising economies Photograph:
How Hwee Young/EPA
19
January, 2014
The
world's richest countries are increasingly outsourcing their carbon
pollution to China and other rising economies, according to a draft
UN report.
Outsourcing
of emissions comes in the form of electronic devices such as
smartphones, cheap clothes and other goods manufactured in China and
other rising economies but consumed in the US and Europe.
A
draft of the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, obtained by the Guardian, says emissions of carbon
dioxide and the other greenhouse gases warming the planet grew twice
as fast in the first decade of the 21st century as they did during
the previous three decades.
Much
of that rise was due to the burning of coal, the report says. And
much of that coal was used to power factories in China and other
rising economies that produce goods for US and European consumers,
the draft adds.
Since
2000, annual carbon dioxide emissions for China and the other rising
economies have more than doubled to nearly 14 gigatonnes a year,
according to the draft report. But about 2 GT a year of that was
produced making goods for export.
The
picture is similar for other rising economies producing goods for
export, the report finds.
"A
growing share of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion in
developing countries is released in the production of goods and
services exported, notably from upper-middle-income countries to
high-income countries," the report says.
Other
middle income countries, with smaller exports, saw a more gradual
rise in emissions. For the poorest countries in the world, however,
emissions have flatlined since 1990.
Factories
in China and other rising economies now produce more carbon pollution
than industries in America and Europe.
"A
growing share of global emissions is released in the manufacture of
products that are traded across international borders," the
draft says.
The
newly wealthy elites of China, India and Brazil are flying more,
buying more cars and otherwise fuelling the consumption that is
driving climate change.
But
their per capita greenhouse gas emissions are still below those in
America and Europe – a gap that China and India regularly cite at
climate talks to deflect pressure to cut emissions.
In
addition, a large and growing share of the carbon pollution
attributed to China and those rising economies was generated in the
production of goods that ended up in America and Europe.
The
outsourcing of those emissions has skewed efforts to account for all
global emissions, which typically was conducted on a national basis.
Those accounting efforts are no longer accurate, according to
analysts.
"If
we are just looking at our national inventory to understand the
emissions trends, it is just not telling the full picture of our
impacts," said Cynthia Cummis, an expert on greenhouse gas
accounting at the World Resources Institute. "We need to
understand the full life cycle of all the goods and services that we
are purchasing and selling."
There
is now growing debate about how to assign responsibility for
emissions generated producing goods that were made in one country but
ultimately destined for another.
"The
consumers that are importing those goods have some responsibility for
those goods that are happening outside of our boundaries,"
Cummis said.
The
29-page draft, a summary for policy makers, was dated 17 December. An
edited version is due to be published in Germany in April.
The
report is the third in a series by the IPCC, summing up the state of
the climate crisis since 2007 and prospects for solutions. The first
part was released in September. It is stark about the chances of
avoiding dangerous climate change – especially if deep cuts in
greenhouse gas emissions are pushed back beyond 2030.
Temperatures
have already risen by 0.8C since the dawning of the industrial age,
the report says.
Unless
there are deep cuts in emissions – up to 70% of current levels by
2050 – or a near-quadrupling of renewable energy, governments may
have to fall back increasingly on experimental technologies for
sucking carbon dioxide from the air to avoid dangerous warming, the
report says.
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