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A SOLUTION FOR
CHINA'S POLLUTION
by Ronald R. Cooke
The Cultural Economist
Author,
"Oil, Jihad & Destiny" and "Detensive Nation"
November 19, 2007
The World
Energy Outlook, published by the International Energy Agency (IEA),
predicts China’s consumption of fossil fuels and other energy
resources will exceed America’s energy consumption by 2010.
China is exporting its pollution to South Korea, Japan and even
the United States in the form of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide,
and particulates which fall to the earth as a mixture of acid
rain and smoggy soot. In 2005, China became the world’s
leading source of sulfur dioxide, and in 2007 it became the
world’s leading source of greenhouse gases.
Pollution
has taken a deadly toll on the Chinese population.
Cardiovascular and respiratory diseases; lung, bladder and
stomach cancer; diarrhea; and other diseases caused over 470,000
deaths in 2006. (Some estimates are higher). In any case, the
social toll is dreadful.
Beijing
refuses to accept meaningful limits on air or water pollution
because China has “the growth disease”. It has a growing
population that needs more and more jobs, needs more an more
things, and wants more and more wealth. China’s leaders know
if they fail to deliver continuing economic and social
opportunity, there will be incredible civil unrest.
Chinese
political policy will thus continue to support expansionist
economic and military activity until China’s EcoSystem
collapses. Sometime in this century. The key is fossil fuel
depletion. The Chinese people may be able to endure bad water
and lousy air, but a nexus will be reached when they are
confronted with energy resource depletion. The subsequent
economic contraction and fuel destitution mean a degradation of
the human condition. Followed by frustration. Anger. And
rebellion.
Think
of it as cultural Ecocide – suicide on a massive scale.
Chinese
leaders have cleverly sidestepped their environmental
responsibility by blaming consumers
for China’s smoke, chemical, and industrial wastes. People
who buy Chinese products, they reason, are exporting their own
potential pollution to China. If these products were
manufactured in the consumer’s home country, then OECD nations
such as the United States, Australia, Germany, and so on would
have to deal with the accompanying water and air contamination.
This
has become a favorite mantra of the international liberal
community. Naughty American consumers are responsible for
Chinese industrial waste because we force
them to make cheap goods for us. According to this thesis, when
the products we purchase are made in China, rather than the
United States, we are exporting our pollution to them.
Counterpoint
The
concept that OECD nations are causing Chinese pollution when
OECD consumers purchase Chinese products is a beguilingly
simplistic idea. Although it shows a agonizing ignorance of how
the world actually works, it invites an equally simplistic
response:
If
we really want to clean up the environment, the single most
effective way to do this is to reduce uncontrollable Chinese
pollution.
The
easiest way to do this is to stop buying Chinese products.
And
bring those jobs back home.
©
2007 Ronald R. Cooke
The Cultural Economist
Author,
"Oil, Jihad & Destiny" and "Detensive Nation"
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