China Fears Disasters,
Grain Cut from Global Warming
December 28, 2006 — By Chris Buckley and Chen Aizhu, Reuters
BEIJING — Global warming threatens to
intensify natural disasters and water shortages across China, driving down
the country's food output, the Chinese government has warned, even as its
seeks to tame energy consumption.
A forthcoming official assessment of the effects of global climate change
on China will warn of worsening drought in northern China and increasing
"extreme weather events", according to the Ministry of Science and
Technology's Web site (www.most.gov.cn) on Wednesday.
A deputy director of the National Climate Centre, Luo Yong, was blunt
about the risks for China's food production.
"The most direct impact of climate change will be on China's grain
production," he said on Tuesday, according to the Science Times newspaper.
"Climate change will bring intensified pressure on our country's
agriculture and grain production."
The official report promises to stir debate about whether and how China
can balance its ambitious goals for economic growth with steps to rein in
rising greenhouse gas emissions from industry and cars, which keep heat in
the atmosphere and threaten to dramatically increase the planet's average
temperatures.
Scientists have been uncertain about the effects of rising global
temperatures on China's farming, unsure whether greater average rainfall
will outweigh the costs of higher temperatures and more frequent natural
disasters.
The official assessment concludes that hotter weather and increased
evaporation will outweigh greater rain and snowfall. In the country's
south, heavier rainfalls could trigger more landslides and mudslides, it
also warns.
Luo indicated that by 2030-2050, China's potential grain output could fall
by 10 percent, unless crop varieties and practices adapt to the
increasingly turbulent climate.
An official from the Ministry of Science and Technology told Reuters that
the government assessment was likely to be fully released in the first
half of 2007.
The climate change warnings came as Chinese President Hu Jintao called for
intensified efforts to save energy.
China should use price, tax and other financial measures to promote energy
saving and curb wasteful use, Hu told a top party meeting, according to
state media on Wednesday. Industries that consume excessive energy and
pollute the environment should be shut down, the official Economic Daily
quoted Hu as saying.
China, the world's fourth-largest economy and second biggest energy user,
has set a goal to cut energy consumption per unit of national income by 20
percent by 2010.
But with coal-fired stations providing over 80 percent of China's
electricity supply, China is on course to overtake the United States by
2009 as the largest emitter of carbon dioxide, one of the main greenhouse
gases that warm the planet.
China has resisted calls for a cap even on emissions growth, arguing that
most carbon dioxide currently in the atmosphere was produced by developed
nations as they industrialised, and they have no right to deny the same
economic growth to others.
Source: Reuters