| China, India Urged To Avoid Obsession With Cars 
    CHINA: April 14, 2008
 
 
 BOAO - China and other big developing countries such as India need to take 
    steps to avoid being over-reliant on private cars, the head of the Nobel 
    Peace Prize-winning UN climate panel said.
 
 
 Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 
    told Reuters that investing in improving railways and urban public 
    transportation was one way countries such as China could balance the need 
    for fighting climate change with that for economic growth.
 
 "This excessive and growing reliance on private vehicular transport is 
    certainly something that doesn't suit large, populous countries like China 
    and India," Pachauri said.
 
 "So we have to find a different model for that -- much more efficient and 
    better railway systems, much better local transport in terms of use of 
    public transport options," he told Reuters on the sidelines of the Boao 
    Forum for Asia held in the southern Chinese island province of Hainan.
 
 China is already the world's second-largest vehicle market, despite only a 
    small fraction of urban residents owning a car.
 
 With incomes rising, car sales are growing by more than a fifth each year, 
    contributing further to serious air pollution in cities, as well as to 
    emissions. China is set to surpass the United States as the world's top 
    emitter of carbon dioxide.
 
 For its part, India will this year see the world's cheapest car, the Nano, 
    hit its roads, bringing car ownership closer to within reach for millions of 
    poorer consumers.
 
 
 DISTANT DREAMS
 
 Pachauri acknowledged that investment in better public transport alone would 
    not be enough to curb growth in private car ownership. Lifestyle changes 
    stemming from better awareness of environmental issues would be important as 
    well, he said.
 
 That, in turn, places responsibility on Western countries.
 
 "You won't get lifestyle changes in the developing world unless the 
    developed world also makes some efforts to bring about those changes," he 
    said.
 
 "I mean, everybody over here watches television and they see all the good 
    things in life in the developed world and naturally they're not prepared to 
    give up that distant vision or dream."
 
 Big developing nations such as China and India are reluctant to agree to any 
    measures as part of global climate change negotiations that might curb their 
    rapid industrialisation, arguing that rich countries, with much higher per 
    capita emissions, should do more.
 
 Implementing better regulations to improve the energy efficiency of 
    buildings would be another way in which China and other emerging markets 
    could make a difference on climate change without sacrificing growth, 
    Pachauri said.
 
 China has set targets to make new buildings 50 percent more energy efficient 
    by 2010, but just over half of new buildings met energy conservation 
    standards, state media said earlier this year, citing a government survey.
 
 Pachauri, who is seeking a second six-year term as head of the IPCC, added 
    that there was scope for China and India to work together more on 
    technological and other solutions to help stem the rise of emissions.
 
 "We have similar conditions in some respects -- we can come up with common 
    solutions that would benefit both the countries," he said.
 
 
 Story by Jason Subler
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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