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From: Andy Soos, ENN
Published October 6, 2011 04:05 PM
Growing CO2 Emissions from China due to Construction
Carbon Dioxide
emissions are not just from industry but may be caused by construction
especially when there is a lot of new construction. Constructing
buildings, power-plants and roads has driven a substantial increase in
China's CO2 emission growth, according to a new study involving the
University of East Anglia. Fast growing capital investments in
infrastructure projects led to the expansion of the construction
industry and its energy and CO2 intensive supply chain, such as steel
and cement production. As a result of this transformation of China’s
economy, more and more CO2 was released per unit of gross domestic
product — a reversion of a long-term trend. Recently China became the
world’s largest consumer of energy and emitter of CO2, overtaking the
US. Previously the country’s
greenhouse gas
emissions growth was driven by rising consumption and exports. Today
this growth is offset by emission savings from efficiency increases, but
these savings are being hindered by the building of infrastructure —
which is important as it dictates tomorrow’s emissions, the
international team of researchers concludes.
"The carbon
intensive nature of capital investment in heavy industry, large
infrastructure building projects, and energy production, might be hard
to avoid as China tries to instigate a virtuous cycle of high rates of
investment and economic growth," explained Giovanni Baiocchi, from
Norwich Business
School at UEA and the lead UK author of the study.
"The high levels of CO2 emissions from capital investment might only be
temporary as, with economic development, investment moves into more
high-tech and greener technologies," added Dr Baiocchi, a senior
lecturer in business and climate change. "However, it is crucial that
China now invests in the right kind of infrastructure to limit the
growth of CO2 emissions that causes global warming. The type of
infrastructure put in place today will also largely determine future
mitigation costs."
The study’s lead author Jan Minx, from the Potsdam Institute for Climate
Impact Research (PIK) and the Technical University of Berlin, said: "Up
to 2002 there has been a race between consumption growth and efficiency
gains. However, the recent rise in emissions is completely due to the
massive structural change of China’s economy. Emissions grow faster and
faster, because CO2 intensive sectors linked to the building of
infrastructure have become more and more dominant. China has developed
into a carbonizing
dragon."
The researchers conducted a structural decomposition analysis of
input-output data for 1992 to 2007 - the most recent official data
available - which allowed them to assign changes in emission over time
to a set of drivers such as consumption growth, efficiency gains or
structural change.
They found that emissions almost tripled between 1992 and 2007, growing
by about four billion tonnes, with 70% of this growth happening between
2002 and 2007. The average annual CO2 emission growth alone in this
period was similar in size to the total CO2 emissions in the UK. While
exports showed the fastest CO2 emission growth at one point, capital
investments and the construction industry then overtook.
CO2 emissions are affected by many factors. These include degree of
urbanization, degree of industrialization, and type of industry. China
is a nation undergoing a vast change in its its urban and industrial
nature which will lead to increased emissions.
According to the study another important driver of emissions is
urbanization — emissions from household consumption are more significant
than the sheer growth of population or even the decreasing household
size. When people move from the countryside to the city lifestyle
changes take place. Urban dwellers, for example, tend to seek
gas heating
and electricity and also depend more upon a transport infrastructure to
get to work, all of which implies a higher per capita carbon footprint.
For further information:
http://www.uea.ac.uk/mac/comm/media/press/2011/October/chinaemissions
Photo:
http://hot.mixtopix.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/China-Construction-Bank.jpg
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