China surpassed the European Union in pollution levels per capita for the first time last year, propelling to a record the worldwide greenhouse-gas emissions that are blamed for climate change.
The findings led by scientists at two British universities show the scale of the challenge of reining in emissions damaging the climate. They estimate that humans already have spewed into the atmosphere two-thirds of the fossil-fuel emissions allowable under scenarios that avoid irreversible changes to the planet.
If pollution continues at the current rate, the limit for carbon will be reached in 30 years, the scientists concluded in a report issued on the eve of a United Nations summit designed to step up the fight against climate change.
“We are nowhere near the commitments needed to stay below 2 degrees Celsius of climate change, a level that will be hard to reach for any country, including rich nations,” said Corinne Le Quere, co-author of the report and a director of the Tyndall Center for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia, England. “CO2 growth now is much faster than it was in the 1990s, and we’re not delivering the improvements in carbon intensity we anticipated 10 years ago.”
Each person in China produced 7.2 tons of carbon dioxide on average compared with 6.8 tons in Europe, 16.4 tons in the U.S. and 1.9 tons in India in 2013, according to the study by the Tyndall Center and the University of Exeter’s College of Mathematics and Physical Sciences.
China passed the U.S. in terms of overall carbon emissions seven years ago and remains the world’s biggest fossil-fuel emissions producer. The academics projected global emissions will rise 2.5 percent in 2014, driving total carbon pollution to a record 40 billion tons.
“It is unfair to blame China just based on its carbon emissions,” said Dai Xingyi, a professor at the Department of Environmental Science and Engineering at Fudan University in Shanghai. “Because China has a huge population that has been dependent on coal for a long time, it will not quit using coal in the foreseeable future.”
A separate study provided some hope that the pace of emissions growth could be reversed in China. Demand for coal in the Asian nation may peak as soon as this year, according to the Carbon Tracker Initiative compiled by a London-based non-profit group that joined the university academics in warning that fossil-fuel burning must be halted.
“There are a host of signals that Chinese demand for coal is close to peaking which will cause a seismic shift in the market,” Anthony Hobley, chief executive officer, wrote in a report. “This is potentially a risky business for investors.”
Last week, Chinese officials vowed to cut carbon emissions per unit of gross domestic product by 50 percent by 2020 when compared with 2005 levels. The National Development & Reform Commission said it would cut the burning of the most polluting forms of coal and stabilize emissions from the steel and cement industries.
The New York summit organized by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon is intended to inject fresh momentum into negotiations aimed at producing a global climate-protection treaty at a conference in Paris in December 2015. Envoys from 190 nations are being asked to make pledges for cutting emissions that apply both to richer and poorer nations starting in 2020.
While U.S. President Barack Obama will attend the meeting, the top leaders of China, India and Germany won’t be there. The EU, China, U.S. and India together accounted for almost two-thirds of global emissions and 80 percent of the growth in pollution, according to the academic study.
Emissions grew 4.2 percent in China, 2.9 percent in the U.S. and 5.1 percent in India last year. The EU’s pollution level declined 1.8 percent because of weaker economic growth. Stefan Nicola, Bloomberg
CLIMATE CHANGE | Mainland surpasses EU in per-capita pollution for first time
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