Guangzhou, China – Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has promised to use an ”iron hand” this summer to make China more energy-efficient. The central government has ordered cities to close inefficient factories by September, among them the vast Guangzhou Steel mill here, where most of the 6,000 workers will be laid off or pushed into early retirement.
Already, in the past three years, China has shut down more than a thousand older coal-fired power plants that used technology of the sort still common in the United States. China has also surpassed the rest of the world as the biggest investor in wind turbines and other clean energy technology. And it has dictated tough new energy standards for lighting and for cars’ gas mileage.
But even as Beijing imposes the world’s most rigorous national energy campaign, the effort is being overwhelmed by the billion-fold demands of Chinese consumers.
Chinese and Western energy experts worry that China’s energy challenge could become the world’s problem, possibly dooming any international efforts to place meaningful limits on global warming.
If China cannot meet its own energy-efficiency targets, the chances of avoiding widespread environmental damage from rising temperatures ”are very close to zero,” said Fatih Birol, the Chief Economist of the International Energy Agency in Paris.
Aspiring to a more Western standard of living – in many cases with the government’s encouragement – the Chinese population, 1.3 billion strong, is clamoring for more and bigger cars, for home appliances and for more air-conditioned shopping malls.
As a result, China is actually becoming even less energy-efficient. And because most of its energy is still produced by burning fossil fuels, China’s emission of carbon dioxide is growing worse. The past winter and spring brought the largest six-month increase in emissions tonnage ever by a single country.
Until recently, projections by both the International Energy Agency and the Energy Information Administration in Washington had assumed that even without an international energy agreement to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, China would achieve rapid improvements in energy efficiency through 2020.
But now China is struggling to limit emissions even to the ”business as usual” levels that climate models assume if the world does little to address global warming.
”We really have an arduous task” even to reach China’s existing energy-efficiency goals, Gao Shixian, an energy official at the National Development and Reform Commission, said in a speech at the Clean Energy Expo China in late June in Beijing.
China’s goal has been to reduce energy consumption per unit of economic output by 20 percent this year from the level of 2005, and to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases per unit of economic output by 40 to 45 percent in 2020, compared with 2005.
But even if China can make the improvements, the International Energy Agency now projects that China’s emissions of energy-related greenhouse gases will grow more than the rest of the world’s combined increase by 2020. China, with one-fifth of the world’s population, is on track to represent more than a quarter of humanity’s energy-related greenhouse-gas emissions.
Industry by industry, energy demand in China is increasing so fast that the broader efficiency targets are becoming harder to hit.
Although China has passed the United States in the average efficiency of its coal-fired power plants, demand for electricity is so voracious that China built new coal-fired plants last year with a total capacity greater than all existing power plants in New York State.
While China has imposed lighting efficiency standards on new buildings and is drafting similar standards for household appliances, construction of apartment and office buildings proceeds at a frenzied pace. And rural sales of refrigerators, washing machines and other large household appliances more than doubled in the past year in response to government subsidies aimed at helping 700 million peasants afford modern amenities.
As the economy becomes more reliant on domestic demand than on exports, growth is shifting toward energy-hungry steel and cement production and away from light industries like toys and apparel.
Chinese cars get 40 percent better gas mileage on average than American cars because they tend to be much smaller and have weaker engines. And China is drafting regulations that would require cars to improve their mileage by 18 percent over the next five years. But China’s auto market soared 48 percent in 2009, surpassing the American market for the first time, and car sales are rising almost as rapidly again this year.
One of the newest factors in energy use in China has emerged beyond the planning purview of policy makers in Beijing, in the form of labor unrest at factories across the country.
An older generation of low-wage migrant workers accepted hot dormitories and factories with barely a fan to keep them cool, one of many reasons Chinese emissions per person are still a third of those in the United States. Besides higher pay, young Chinese are now demanding their own studio apartments measuring 9 square meters, or 100 square feet, with air-conditioning at home and in factories. Indeed, one of the demands by workers who went on strike in May at a Honda transmission factory was that the air-conditioning be set lower.
Chinese regulations still mandate that the air-conditioning in most places be set no cooler than 26 degrees Celsius (79 Fahrenheit) in the summer. But upscale shopping malls have long been exempt from the controls and have maintained much cooler temperatures through the summers. Now those malls are proliferating in cities across China.
Mr. Wen acknowledged in a statement after a cabinet meeting in May that the efficiency gains had started to reverse and had actually deteriorated by 3.2 percent in the first quarter of this year. He cited a lack of controls on energy-intensive industries, although the economic rebound from the global financial crisis also might have played a role.
Global climate discussions, in pinning hopes on China’s vast capacity for improving its efficiency in energy use, have tended to cite International Energy Agency data showing that China uses twice as much energy per dollar of output as the United States and three times as much as the European Union. The implicit assumption is that China can greatly improve efficiency because it must still be relying mainly on wasteful, aging boilers and outmoded power plants.
But David Fridley, a longtime specialist in China’s energy at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, said that the comparison with the United States and the European Union was misleading. Manufacturing makes up three times as much of the Chinese economy as it does in the U.S. economy, and it is energy-intensive. If America had much more manufacturing, Mr. Fridley said, it would also use considerably more energy per dollar of output.
”China has been trying to grab the low-lying fruit – to find those opportunities where increased efficiency can save money and reduce carbon-dioxide emissions,” said Ken Caldeira, a climate change specialist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in California. ”It is starting to look like it might not be that easy to find and grab this fruit.”
Source: Published in The International Herald Tribune on July 6, 2010.