 Stories About: China AND climate AND climate change mitigation AND greenhouse-gas emissions AND politics
| Headline |
Author |
Published |
Section |
You first! No, you first! China and the U.S. are both obliged to act on climate change, quick-like |
David Roberts |
13 Dec 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Apparently, based on some recent threads on this site, there's some dispute about the role China plays in the Great International Climate Change Debate. I'm absolutely snowed under right now, but I want to make two quick points: It is indisputable that the U.S., and developed countries generally, bear a vastly larger share of the responsibility for climate change than China, and developing countries generally. This is true whatever perspective you take: physical respo ... |
|
| Topics: politics, greenhouse-gas emissions, China, United States, climate equity, climate, international politics, climate change mitigation (all these topics) |
|
|
Hope for a post-Kyoto agreement? China is prepared to make a climate deal |
Joseph Romm |
13 Nov 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Potentially a very big deal -- The Independent reports 'China 'will agree to cut its carbon emissions'': China, now the world's biggest greenhouse-gas emitter, will eventually agree to cut its soaring carbon dioxide emissions, one of the country's leading environmentalists forecast yesterday -- but only on the basis of a deal with the United States and the rest of the developed world. When is eventually? The Chinese would be very unlikely to set their own ... |
|
| Topics: politics, China, climate, greenhouse-gas emissions, international politics, climate change mitigation (all these topics) |
|
|
Beijing Dispatch: China's carbon harbingers Plans for reducing emissions in China |
Christina Larson |
10 Nov 2007 |
Gristmill |
| David linked to the Reuters report about China's refusal to accept binding emissions caps in any international agreement. On the topic of China and climate change, last week I got some face time with the head of the World Bank's energy unit in Beijing, Dr. Zhao. Too much for one blog post, but here are some highlights: According to his research, the World Bank's go-to guy on these matters believes: 'It will be difficult or even impossible for China to reduce CO2 ... |
|
| Topics: China, climate, climate change mitigation, greenhouse-gas emissions, politics (all these topics) |
|
|
On climate, Hu's leading whom? Snappy comebacks for the climate do-nothing set who's using China as an excuse |
Anna Fahey |
28 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| On a hot day this summer, Chinese President Hu Jintao and a group of state leaders appeared at a public function wearing short-sleeved shirts, rather than their normal business suits. According to the state press, the casual attire wasn't just a new fashion statement: China's top brass were leading by example, encouraging Chinese workers to dress in light clothing in order to reduce the use of air conditioners in office buildings. Fashions do change. Outright denial of ... |
|
| Topics: China, climate, climate change mitigation, greenhouse-gas emissions, international politics, politics (all these topics) |
|
|
One more truth about China and climate change It's about more than money |
Christina Larson |
21 Jun 2007 |
Gristmill |
| It's official. China is now the world's top emitter of greenhouse gases. Having spent much of this spring reporting in China, I'd like to second just about everything David said yesterday on the topic. But I have one ginormous point to add. It's not just money that's needed. Yes, it'd be a good thing if Hill folks stopped bashing technology-exchange programs as lending an 'unfair competitive advantage.' And yes, let's stop painting China as the international ... |
|
| Topics: China, climate, climate change mitigation, Congress, greenhouse-gas emissions, politics, United States (all these topics) |
|
|
|
|