How China is (and isn't) fighting pollution and climate change | Angel Hsu
Summary
TLDRThis talk explores China's evolving environmental efforts, particularly its battle with air pollution and coal dependency. Starting with a personal story about unreliable air quality data, it highlights China's environmental awakening driven by public outcry. The country has made remarkable strides in renewable energy, leading in hydropower, wind, and solar. Despite these advances, concerns remain over coal consumption, pollution exports, and unreliable data. With global implications, China's environmental choices are crucial in shaping the world's climate future, as the nation navigates its complex path towards sustainable leadership.
Takeaways
- đ China's air quality app once reported good air quality despite visible pollution, highlighting discrepancies in data accuracy.
- đŹïž The failure to measure PM2.5, fine particulate matter, led to widespread citizen outcry over inaccurate air quality reports.
- đ Social media and public questioning spurred an environmental awakening in China, pushing the government to address pollution.
- ⥠China's reliance on coal for two-thirds of its electricity spurred the government to launch a 'war on coal' to reduce pollution.
- đ China leads the world in hydropower, wind, and solar energy capacity, with massive investments driving this transition.
- đ In 2017, China installed 35 gigawatts of solar power in just seven months, surpassing many countries' total solar capacity.
- đ China's coal consumption peaked around 2013, leading to notable reductions in air pollution and improvements in life expectancy.
- đ However, there is uncertainty around China's recent fossil fuel consumption, raising concerns about a potential increase in emissions.
- đŽ Environmental experiments, like dockless bike sharing, have had mixed success, sometimes leading to unintended consequences like bike overuse.
- đ Despite domestic environmental progress, China is still exporting pollution abroad through infrastructure projects like coal-fired plants as part of the One Belt, One Road Initiative.
Q & A
What prompted the environmental awakening in China regarding air pollution?
-The disconnect between official air quality statistics and what citizens were experiencing, particularly after PM2.5 pollution went off the charts in 2012, prompted citizens to question the data and demand more transparency.
Why was PM2.5 considered politically sensitive in China?
-PM2.5, or fine particulate pollution, was linked to serious health issues, and the government kept data on it secret due to its harmful effects and the fear that it might trigger public unrest.
How did citizens in China begin to respond to the air pollution crisis?
-Citizens became more aware of the health risks of air pollution and started demanding greater transparency. They also adopted measures like purchasing air purifiers and incorporating PM2.5 references in pop culture, such as musical festivals.
What role did Chai Jing's documentary 'Under the Dome' play in raising awareness?
-'Under the Dome' played a major role in bringing air pollution awareness to the forefront by highlighting that it caused one million premature deaths annually in China. The documentary received over 100 million views in a weekend before being pulled by the government.
How has China's government responded to air pollution concerns?
-In response to public outcry, China's government has taken steps like shutting down small coal mines, limiting coal consumption, and investing in clean energy sources such as hydropower, wind, and solar energy.
What are some examples of China's clean energy achievements?
-China leads the world in hydropower, wind, and solar power generation. For instance, it has installed enough hydropower capacity to power two homes per citizen and surpassed its 2020 solar power target well ahead of schedule.
How is China's shift to clean energy affecting global climate change?
-China's reduction in coal consumption and investments in renewable energy have contributed to reductions in carbon emissions, which is a positive step toward addressing global climate change, given China's large carbon footprint.
Despite progress, why should we be cautious about China's environmental data?
-China's environmental data, particularly regarding coal consumption and carbon emissions, is often revised after the fact. There are also concerns about whether China's emissions are actually increasing despite reported reductions.
What challenges does China's One Belt, One Road Initiative pose to environmental progress?
-While China is reducing pollution domestically, it has been exporting pollution abroad by financing coal-fired power plants in over 68 countries as part of its infrastructure investments, which complicates its role as a global environmental leader.
Why is China seen as a potential global environmental leader despite its challenges?
-With the US withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement, people are looking to China to fill the global leadership void on environmental issues. China's significant investments in clean energy and green job growth position it as a key player in determining the global environmental future.
Outlines
đ€ When Data Fails to Show Reality
The speaker starts by discussing an experience where air quality data in ĂrĂŒmqi, China, didn't match the visible reality. Though the air quality app showed low pollution levels, the thick smog was undeniable. This discrepancy stemmed from the failure to measure PM2.5, fine particulate matter that poses health risks. Public awareness surged when PM2.5 levels spiked in 2012, forcing the Chinese government to address pollution more seriously. This led to a broader environmental awakening in China, where citizens demanded more transparency in pollution data, which sparked changes in policy.
đ± Chinaâs Evolving Green Policies
The speaker shares how they observed Chinaâs budding green revolution in 2011. While initially skeptical outsiders questioned whether China even had environmental policies, there was already an emerging awareness of PM2.5 pollution. Retailers began selling air purifiers, and cultural events were even named after air quality indicators. Efforts to raise awareness continued, including creative initiatives like Shanghaiâs AQI Girl, a mascot representing the air quality index. In 2015, Chai Jingâs documentary 'Under the Dome' raised alarm about air pollution, which led the government to address its root causes, particularly focusing on coal consumption and clean energy investments.
đĄ Chinaâs Mind-Blowing Renewable Energy Progress
China has made remarkable strides in renewable energy, leading the world in hydropower, wind, and solar power generation. The countryâs commitment to renewable energy is evident through large projects like the Three Gorges Dam, which is the worldâs largest power station. China has surpassed its solar power targets and is poised to generate massive amounts of electricity from wind and solar by 2020. The shift away from coal has contributed to reduced air pollution, improved public health, and even slowed the countryâs carbon emissions. However, thereâs still uncertainty about Chinaâs long-term reliance on fossil fuels.
đŽââïž Challenges Amid Rapid Development
While China has made impressive progress in reducing coal consumption and improving air quality, challenges remain. The speaker notes that data can be murky, and there are concerns that Chinaâs fossil fuel consumption may rise again. Additionally, some solutions, such as dockless bike sharing, have moved too quickly and faced unexpected problems, like bicycle graveyards. Despite these setbacks, Chinaâs environmental actions have global implications. The countryâs exports, including air pollution and coal-fired power plants, affect other nations, making China's environmental decisions critical on a global scale.
đ Chinaâs Role in Global Environmental Leadership
As the US steps back from climate leadership, the world looks to China to fill the gap. The speaker emphasizes that China is at a pivotal moment, leading in green job creation and clean energy. However, Chinaâs global role is complex, as it continues to export pollution through coal plant investments in other countries. The speaker highlights that air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions do not respect borders, meaning Chinaâs environmental policies have worldwide effects. Though China is making progress, the road ahead is long, and global environmental health may depend on Chinaâs future actions.
Mindmap
Keywords
đĄPM2.5
đĄAir Quality Index (AQI)
đĄCoal consumption
đĄRenewable energy
đĄChai Jing
đĄOne Belt, One Road Initiative
đĄGlobal climate change
đĄCarbon footprint
đĄEnvironmental awakening
đĄGreen jobs
Highlights
Seeing is not always believing, as evidenced by a photo from ĂrĂŒmqi where the air quality app showed good air quality, but the actual visibility was poor due to unmeasured PM2.5 pollution.
PM2.5, or fine particulate pollution, was not measured in early air quality statistics, causing a disconnect between reported and actual air quality.
The US Embassy's tweet in 2012 describing PM2.5 levels as 'crazy bad' spurred Chinese citizens to demand greater transparency and action on air pollution.
Citizen awareness and social media activism in China led to an environmental awakening and forced the government to address pollution issues.
China's green evolution began to gain momentum around 2011, with public demand for air purifiers and increased transparency about PM2.5.
Shanghai's Environmental Protection Bureau created a mascot, AQI Girl, to communicate air quality data to the public effectively.
Chai Jing's 2015 documentary 'Under the Dome' raised awareness about air pollution and its health impacts, drawing over 100 million views before being censored.
China has made significant investments in clean and renewable energy, becoming a global leader in hydropower, wind, and solar energy.
China's Three Gorges Dam is the largest power station in the world, contributing significantly to the country's hydropower capacity.
In 2017, China installed 35 gigawatts of solar power in seven months, more than half of the total solar power capacity in the US.
China's reduction in coal consumption since 2013 has led to notable improvements in air quality and reductions in carbon emissions.
Air pollution reductions in major Chinese cities have led to an average increase in life expectancy by 2.5 years since 2013.
Despite progress, there is caution as China's coal consumption statistics are often revised, and global emissions may be rising again.
China's international investments, such as the One Belt, One Road Initiative, often include coal-fired power plants, exporting pollution abroad.
China's leadership in clean energy is crucial for global environmental efforts, especially as other countries like the US withdraw from agreements like the Paris Climate Accord.
Transcripts
When is seeing not believing?
A couple years ago, my friend sent me this photo from ĂrĂŒmqi,
which is the capital of Xinjiang province in northwest China.
On this particular day, she couldn't believe her eyes.
Checking the quality of the air outside using this app on her iPad,
the numbers were telling her the air quality was good,
one on a scale of 500.
But when she looked outside, she saw something much different.
Yes, those are buildings in the background.
(Laughter)
But the data were simply not telling the truth
of what people were seeing and breathing,
and it's because they were failing to measure PM2.5,
or fine particulate pollution.
When PM2.5 levels went off the charts in 2012,
or "crazy bad," as the US Embassy once described it in a tweet,
Chinese denizens took to social media
and they started to question why it was that they were seeing this disconnect
between official air quality statistics
and what they were seeing and breathing for themselves.
Now, this questioning has led
to an environmental awakening of sorts in China,
forcing China's government to tackle its pollution problems.
Now China has the opportunity to become a global environmental leader.
But the picture that I'll paint for you today
is one that's mixed.
There are some signs that are very promising,
and there are other trends that are more troubling
that warrant closer attention.
But now let's go back to the story at hand.
I started to witness the beginnings of China's green evolution
when I was a PhD student conducting fieldwork in China in 2011.
I traveled all across the country seeking answers to the question
that I often got myself from the skeptical outsider:
What, you mean China is doing something on the environment?
They have environmental policies?
What policies?
At that time, PM2.5 data was considered too politically sensitive
and so the government was keeping it secret,
but citizens were becoming aware of its harmful human health effects,
and they were demanding greater transparency
on the part of the government.
I actually started to see some of this growing evolution and awareness myself
cropping up all over China.
Department stores, for example, started to market these air purifiers
that could filter out harmful PM2.5.
Citizens were also adopting PM2.5 as the title of musical festivals.
(Laughter)
And then I went to a golf course in Shenzhen, which is in southern China,
and you can see from this banner, they're advertising a retreat from PM2.5.
Golf sub-par, but don't breathe sub-par air.
And then Shanghai's Environmental Protection Bureau
decided to create a mascot named after the air quality index
to better communicate the air quality data to its people.
I call her AQI Girl,
and her expression and hair color changes depending on the quality of air outside.
Five years later and she's still the mostly smiling face
of Shanghai's air quality.
And then in 2015,
former CCTV reporter Chai Jing
created this documentary called "Under the Dome."
It would be likened to Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring."
And much like Rachel Carson
brought to attention the fact that pesticides were harming human health,
"Under the Dome" stamped into the popular consciousness
that air pollution was leading to one million premature deaths
every year in China alone.
This video garnered
more than a hundred million views in a single weekend
before China's government,
fearing that it might incite some type of social unrest,
pulled it from the internet.
But the damage had already been done.
Public outcry over air pollution
galvanized China's government,
perhaps in an act of self-preservation,
to think big and decisively about how it could tackle
the root of its air pollution
and many of its other environmental problems:
its energy system.
For you see, in China,
about two thirds of its electricity comes from coal.
China has more coal-fired power plants than any other country in the world,
about 40 percent of the global total,
and it's because of this fact that China's government
has decided since 2014 to wage a war on coal,
shutting down small coal mines,
setting limits on coal consumption,
even canceling an Australia's worth of coal-fired power plants.
They've also been making enormous investments
when it comes to clean and renewable energy,
like hydropower, wind and solar,
and the pace and the scale of this transformation
has been absolutely mind-blowing.
Let me give you a couple of statistics to show you what I mean.
China leads the world when it comes to hydropower,
with a third of total capacity.
There's enough for every Chinese citizen
to power two homes in a single year from hydropower alone.
You may have heard of the Three Gorges Dam,
pictured here,
which is the largest power station in the world,
and it's powered by water.
In terms of wind power,
China has a third of the global capacity.
This makes it the number one leader by far.
When we look at solar, China's also leading.
In fact, they crushed their 2020 target
of installing 105 gigawatts of solar power.
This is after the government already revised upwards
several times its solar energy target
between 2009 and 2015.
Last year, in seven months alone,
China was able to install a whopping 35 gigawatts of solar power.
This is more than half of what the US has combined in total
and China did this in just seven months alone.
We can verify this remarkable growth in solar power from space,
like the startup SpaceKnow has done in this slide.
By 2020, China is on track to generate Germany's entire electricity consumption
from just wind and solar power alone.
It's pretty darn remarkable.
And we see some evidence now
that China's efforts on clean energy
is actually having an effect,
not just on air pollution reduction,
but also on global climate change,
where China has the world's largest carbon footprint.
If we look at some of the data, we can see that China's coal consumption
may have already reached a peak as early as 2013.
This is a major reason why China's government announced
that actually they've already achieved their 2020 carbon reduction pledge
ahead of schedule.
This reduction in coal consumption
is also directly driving improvements in air quality
across the country,
as I've shown here in blue.
In most major Chinese cities,
air pollution has fallen by as much as 30 percent.
And this reduction in air pollution is actually leading people
to live longer lives in China,
on average two and a half years more than they would have in 2013.
In yellow, we can see the cities that have experienced
the greatest improvements in air quality.
But of course, as I mentioned at the beginning of this talk,
we have to temper some of this optimism
with a healthy dose of caution,
and that's largely because the data are still being determined.
At the end of last year,
after roughly three years of pretty steady global carbon emissions,
scientific projections suggest
that global emissions may be on the rise again
and that could be due to increases in China's fossil fuel consumptions,
so they may not have reached that peak that I showed earlier.
But of course, the statistics and the data are still murky
and that's because China regularly revises its coal statistics after the fact.
Actually, it's funny,
since I've been here I've been having a debate on Twitter
with other climate modelers,
trying to figure out whether China's carbon emissions
have gone up, gone down or whether they're staying relatively stable.
And of course, China is still a rapidly developing country.
It's still experimenting with a range of policies,
like dockless bike sharing,
which has been hailed as a possible sustainable transport solution.
But then we have images of this bicycle graveyard
that tell a more cautionary tale.
Sometimes, solutions can move too fast
and outpace demand.
And of course, coal is still king in China,
at least for now.
So why should we care about what China is doing on the environment?
Well, what China does at home on the environment
can have global implications for the rest of us.
To borrow a line from Chai Jing,
we're all under the same dome,
and air pollution that originates in China
can travel beyond its borders
and affect populations as far away as those in North America.
China's not only exporting air pollution,
but they're also exporting aid, infrastructure, technology abroad.
President Xi Jinping in 2013 announced the One Belt, One Road Initiative,
a massive, one-trillion-US-dollar infrastructure investment project
in more than 60 other countries.
And historically, when we've seen
that China has made these infrastructure investments abroad,
they haven't always been clean.
The Global Environment Institute, a Chinese civil society group,
found that in the last 15 years,
China has invested in more than 240 coal-fired power plants
in more than 68 countries
affiliated with the One Belt, One Road Initiative.
That's more than a quarter of China's own domestic coal-fired capacity
that is exported abroad.
So we can see that even though China is cleaning up at home,
it's exporting some of that pollution
to other countries,
and greenhouse gas emissions simply don't have a passport.
So when we're trying to evaluate this question
of whether or not China is actually leading,
we can see it's still very much an open debate.
But time is running out.
I've studied the climate models, and the outlook is not good.
We still have a gap between current policies
and what needs to happen if we want to avoid dangerous climate change.
Leadership is what we desperately need,
but it's not coming from the US, for example.
The US administration last June announced its intent
to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement,
so now people are looking towards China to fill that leadership void.
So China is very much in the driver's seat
determining our global environmental future.
What they do on carbon trading,
on clean energy, on air pollution,
we can learn many lessons.
One of those lessons is that clean energy is not just good for the environment,
it can save lives by reducing air pollution.
It's also good for the economy.
We can see that last year,
China was responsible for 30 percent of the global growth
in green jobs.
The US? Only six.
So the picture that I just painted for you
hopefully seems much different
from those murky, foggy air quality statistics
to a much clearer picture of China's clean energy.
And even though China is headed in the right direction,
we know that there's still a very long road ahead.
So let me ask you once more: Is seeing believing?
Can we trust the data and the statistics
that show that China's air quality is coming down
and that its war on coal is actually having an effect?
Well, let's take a look at some of the latest satellite images
of China's solar power installations.
I want you to look very closely at this image.
Can you see?
The proof may just be in the pandas.
Thank you so much.
(Applause)
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