The pace of China’s economic growth poses a dire threat for the planet unless Beijing and other industrial countries change their outdated model of production and consumption, an environmental activist warned.
”Our global civilisation today is on an economic path that is environmentally unsustainable, a path that is leading us toward economic decline and eventual collapse,” said Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute.
As China surpasses the United States in the consumption of most basic resources, economists must grasp the need to restructure the ”old economy,” said Brown during a presentation on his new book, Plan B 2.0: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble.
China already consumes almost twice as much meat as the United States (67-million tonnes compared to 39-million tonnes), and more than twice as much steel (258-million tonnes compared to 104-million tonnes), Brown said, citing figures compiled by his institute.
If the Chinese continue to pursue the ”American dream,” its 1,45-billion inhabitants are projected to consume the equivalent of two-thirds of the world’s grain harvest and double the world’s current paper production by the year 2031, according to Brown.
”There go the world’s forests,” he said.
The western economic model — built on fossil fuels, cars and disposable products — cannot function in such a populous country as China, nor in India, where the population will surpass China’s in 2031, Brown said.
At a time of globalisation and intense competition to produce more at ever lower prices, the contemporary economic model is doomed, he said.
”Environmental scientists have been saying for some time that the global economy is being slowly undermined by environmental trends of human origin, including shrinking forests, expanding deserts, falling water tables, eroding soils, collapsing fisheries, rising temperatures, melting ice, rising seas and increasingly destructive storms,” Brown said.
With the onset of climate change, Brown said that ”we may be approaching the point of no return”.
To avert disaster, the world must embrace renewable energy, move to eradicate poverty, stabilise population and restore natural systems, according to Brown’s prescription.
There were encouraging signs that China was prepared to adjust its policies amid increasing concern over air and water pollution, he said.
”There is growing recognition in China that they have to make some changes… though it has not yet publicly taken the form of saying the western economic model is not going to work for us,” Brown said.
Five to eight major Chinese enterprises in the electronics and aerospace sectors have already announced plans to employ wind power, in cooperation with the United States giant General Electric.
”They have also been adopting fuel efficiency standards for automobiles in China,” Brown said.
Shifting to renewable energy such as wind, solar, and geothermal power will require intelligent development, though, to avoid creating shortages or driving up the price for a particular commodity.
That could happen if, for example, the agricultural industry moved en masse to produce ethanol fuel, he said.
Wind farms in Europe, solar rooftops in Japan, hybrid cars in the United States and bicyle-dominated streets in Amsterdam provided ”glimpses of the new economy,” Brown said.
”Virtually everything we need to do to build an economy that will sustain economic progress is already being done in one or more countries.” – Sapa-AFP