Sunday, February 22, 2009

Blog Lesson 6- International Herald Tribune China/US Global considerations

In an effort to fight climate change, China is brought globally to the table. U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton established the issue in Beijing recently, inviting China to curb greenhouse gases with the United States.

Historically, much of China's electricity was supplied by coal. Coal does not burn clean and has left China with a history of outputting greenhouse gases. In addition, the changing climate can provide much needed open dialogue for other historical issues between United States and China. "It is simply the unforgiving math of accumulating emissions" both historical and present day that provided this platform for China's international and global change. (Landler)

Today the United States is sending the Secretary of State and her "special envoy for climate change" to reduce emissions. (Landler) In addition, the issue of changing climates provides, an "issue in which the two countries can lean into a problem together."(Landler)

Article Listed Below-- SinoLinx


International Herald Tribune
Clinton urges China to fight climate change
By Mark Landler
Sunday, February 22, 2009

BEIJING: Declaring that "we hope you won't make the same mistakes we made," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton invited China to join the United States in an ambitious effort to curb greenhouse gases.

"When we were industrializing and growing, we didn't know any better; neither did Europe," Clinton said as she toured an energy-efficient power plant in Beijing on Saturday. "Now we're smart enough to figure out how to have the right kind of growth."

The gas-fired power plant, which uses sophisticated turbines made by General Electric, is nearly twice as efficient as the coal-fired plants that supply much of China's electricity and that helped vault China past the United States as the world's leading emitter of carbon dioxide.

The Obama administration hopes to make climate change the centerpiece of a broader, more vigorous engagement with China. For Clinton, the two-day stop in Beijing at the end of a weeklong Asian tour represented an effort to put her own stamp on a relationship that was dominated by the Treasury Department in the latter years of the Bush administration.

"The opportunities for us to work together are unmatched anywhere in the world," Clinton declared, on a hectic day filled with meetings with President Hu Jintao and other top Chinese officials.

Human rights groups have criticized Clinton for soft-pedaling on Tibet and other issues during her first visit as secretary of state. She said she did not want these disputes to interfere with critical challenges like climate change, the global economic crisis and security concerns.

It was a stark contrast to 1995, when Clinton, then first lady, gave a speech in Beijing at a UN conference in which she catalogued abuses against women and concluded by saying that "human rights are women's rights, and women's rights are human rights."

Speaking after a meeting with the foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, Clinton said she had raised the Tibet issue and other concerns. But she argued that the work of advocacy groups and people in civil society in this area was "at least as important" as that of government officials.

Yang repeated China's customary statement that Beijing was ready to discuss human rights with Washington on the basis of "equality and noninterference in each other's affairs." The "smiling faces" on Chinese people, he said, attested to the country's respect for human rights.

A local rights group, Chinese Human Rights Defenders, said the Beijing police put a number of dissidents and activists under surveillance during Clinton's visit, confining some in their homes.

On the global economic crisis, the two governments said they would work together to chart a recovery. Clinton said she expected to see changes in the economic relationship between China, with its high savings rate, and the United States, with its heavy borrowing.

During their meeting, she said, Yang told her that Chinese people were spending more on home appliances. "It would also be fair to say that many Americans have now come to terms with the fact that saving might be a good habit to acquire," Clinton said.

She thanked Yang for China's "continuing confidence" in the United States, as the largest foreign buyer of Treasury securities. He offered a noncommittal statement that China would decide where to invest its foreign exchange reserves on the basis of safety, value and liquidity.

In an interview Sunday that was broadcast on Dragon Television, Clinton pressed her case for why China should continue to buy U.S. Treasury bonds.

"It's a good investment; it's a safe investment," she told Yang Lan, the host of the show.

The Chinese government, Clinton said, had an even more compelling incentive to keep buying: It needs the United States to recover as a market for Chinese goods. To jolt the economy back to life, she said, the United States needs to be able to take on more debt.

"We are truly going to rise or fall together," she said. "We are in the same boat, and, thankfully, we are rowing in the same direction."

Clinton's visit to the Taiyanggong Thermal Power Plant allowed her to steer the focus back to climate change. She introduced her special envoy for climate change, Todd Stern, who noted that the United States and China accounted for 40 percent of the world's emissions.

"This not a matter of politics or morality or right or wrong," he said. "It is simply the unforgiving math of accumulating emissions."

So far, the United States and China are mainly collaborating on research projects and ventures like the power plant. The harder work, analysts said, would come if the United States presses China to accept mandatory caps on its emissions - something Beijing has so far rejected.

Still, some China specialists say they believe that climate change could give relations between the countries fresh energy. The White House has paid close attention to a report by the Asia Society and the Pew Center for Global Climate Change, which offers a road map for cooperation.

"If you look at U.S.-China relations, there are a lot of issues that can go either way," said Orville Schell, a China scholar at the Asia Society who was involved in producing the report. "What's missing is an issue in which the two countries can lean into a problem together."
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International Herald Tribune Copyright © 2009 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com

1 comment:

  1. China has been full steam ahead (or maybe full smoke ahead) since entering the world economy. When a nation of 1 billion people finally finds an opportunity to prosper, it's hard to stop the momentum. Trading partners need to force China to comply with world environmental standards, but the world will have to face increased prices on goods from China. What keeps China able to compete and has allowed their economy to grow was lax standards in wages, environment and quality control. This has encouraged foreign investment without questions. Don't care how you do it, just do it buying. That doesn't work in regulated countries. A US plant would not be allowed to function at the same level and with the same effect on the environment. Producing cleanly costs money and drives up the final cost of production. There comes a time when you have to ask yourself, at what cost is it really to buy this item? I think in the US we are seeing a lot of those affects now as we are a country losing its production and manufacturing identity and much of that was due to new factors in a global economy which allows for cheaper production.

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