Danoff
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- Mile High City
China requires coal, lots and lots of it.
China uses coal. That doesn't mean they have to.
China requires coal, lots and lots of it.
Explain, Spock.China uses coal. That doesn't mean they have to.
Explain, Spock.
Please explain how China doesn't have to use coal.
Why don't they use those alternatives?Well, I mean, nuclear, solar, wind, waves... tons of options that dont require coal.
Reportedly, About 70 percent of China's total energy consumption and nearly 80 percent of its electricity production come from coal, and its recent shift from being a historical net coal exporter to the world's largest net coal importer took only three years.
China uses coal. That doesn't mean they have to.
So they aren't equivalent options they can just swap in and out. They are higher cost alternatives they must voluntarily choose to use for the benefit of their people/the world.My guess the reason is the same reason they manufacture so much crap. It's Cheaper and easier to build coal plants than nuclear.
So they aren't equivalent options they can just swap in and out. They are higher cost alternatives they must voluntarily choose to use for the benefit of their people/the world.
I don't know the actual numbers but when I see statements like that it usually means they are starting from a comparitively low base to measure from.They're literally increasing the percentage of their power produced by nuclear faster than any other power source.
Yeah... so? As Danoff points out, it's a higher energy output than coal. Without the pollution they struggle with.So they aren't equivalent options they can just swap in and out. They are higher cost alternatives they must voluntarily choose to use for the benefit of their people/the world.
I don't know the actual numbers but when I see statements like that it usually means they are starting from a comparitively low base to measure from.
In the absence of other factors I think it's pretty safe to assume they chose the cheapest and easiest alternative in coal. Voluntarily choosing a higher cost alternative is not necessarily something people do willingly or easily. Source: global warmingYeah... so? As Danoff points out, it's a higher energy output than coal. Without the pollution they struggle with.
None of us are China, so we dont get to make the decisions there, but that doesnt mean that coal is a better choice just because they made it, nor does it mean there isnt an alternative to coal for them to use just because they didn't (which danoff is indicating they are.)
No doubt. But what about global warming and Paris Agreement?? If China isn't participating in the effort, and actually burning coal like there's no tomorrow simply to keep its 1,415,045,928 people warm and their economy humming, then isn't it rather silly to talk of effectively fighting global warming in the here and now? And isn't the very chance of fighting global warming going to cost fabulous amounts of money? And how is fabulous amounts of money generated without a vigorous and expanding economy? As far as I know, currently the US is the only major economy in the world that is vigorous and growing. And we are 21 Trillion Dollars in Debt! IMO, if global warming is real, then its 100% unstoppable.My guess the reason is the same reason they manufacture so much crap. It's Cheaper and easier to build coal plants than nuclear.
In the absence of other factors I think it's pretty safe to assume they chose the cheapest and easiest alternative in coal. Voluntarily choosing a higher cost alternative is not necessarily something people do willingly or easily. Source: global warming
In real terms China produced 3% of their power from Nuclear in 2015 with plans to go to 6% by 2020. Using Wikipedia figures it looks like they plan to increase nuclear capacity by double to triple by 2030. Given their increasing demand for energy this might get them to 8-10% of capacity. That's a drop in the bucket. It's not really enough to have any significant impact on global CO2 emissions or pollution levels in China. Locally of course, anyone that gets a nuke plant built upwind from them will benefit but on the whole it will have little effect on total emissions or pollution levels. China doesn't plan on reducing carbon emissions until 2030 according to the Paris Agreement. Given this chart, I'd say that's a Herculean monkey wrench in the gears and dwarfs the efforts of the west to reduce carbon emissions by 20 or 20 or 40%.Forgetting global warming, their coal pollution is creating major health problems and ruining quality of life. They are of course aware of this and are moving into nuclear in a big way.
The US on the otherhand... pollutes quite a lot and still uses coal... for mostly indefensible reasons. We have 98 nuclear reactors with 2 under construction providing 20% of our electricity. That number could (and should) grow a lot. When China's 13 reactors under construction are complete, they will have over half of our nuclear power capacity. And we produce more than any other country (not by percentage, but by raw electrical output).
We need to get building.
In real terms China produced 3% of their power from Nuclear in 2015 with plans to go to 6% by 2020.
Are we making progress in nuclear waste storage and disposal? Could you bring us up to date on this, and on public acceptance, please?We should be making our own progress.
Are we making progress in nuclear waste storage and disposal? Could you bring us up to date on this, and on public acceptance, please?
Progress in relative terms, not much progress in absolute terms and certainly not progress as measured against what climate scientists are telling us we need to do in the next 10-20 years. It's a move in the right direction, but more like a single step on a long journey you don't have enough time to complete.Double in 5 years is progress. Progress they sorely need. I like that they're taking steps in the right direction. We should be making our own progress.
Every report I've heard on that is that Air travel is a drop in the ocean compared to all the cars.
Put all those passengers on high-speed coal powered ships and the net effect will probably be negative.
I was going to say we should wean ourselves away from shipping... but cost is often proportional to emissions. If it costs less to mass produce and ship something, then it probably requires less energy than building factories all over and having those run at lower efficiencies to produce the same products in scattered locales... products which will still have to be transported over land, anyway.
Are we making progress in nuclear waste storage and disposal? Could you bring us up to date on this, and on public acceptance, please?
People rag on China, but they're producing half the CO2 per capita from fuel compared to "western" countries. It's not their fault that they have a large population and therefore a large overall contribution.
According to this and this, CO2 emissions for China per unit of GDP are double that of the United States. According to the first source, China is the 11th worst CO2 emitter measured per GDP and the U.S. is only 40th worst.It's difficult to generalise about a third of the entire planet's population - but that's often done with the figures. The CO2 emmision charts on wiki are quite interesting - the real bogeyman is the USA which has high industrialisation and an insane reliance on fossil fuels. China's output isn't as bad per GDP or per capita (a difficult figure to reconcile given the largely agrarian rural economies across much of China) as some other countries.
It's interesting to see Australia's output-per-capita given your comments about Aussies and their cars. Surely you're all ripe for solar conversions now?
It's interesting to see Australia's output-per-capita given your comments about Aussies and their cars.
Surely you're all ripe for solar conversions now?
I wouldn't say 'to some extent' - that's exactly the reason. China's CO2 emissions per capita have tripled in the last 20 years, while the US, Japan, UK etc. have all seen declines since peaks in the 60's or 70's - meanwhile, China's efforts to limit CO2 emissions have actually gone into reverse and their emissions are going back up.People rag on China, but they're producing half the CO2 per capita from fuel compared to "western" countries. It's not their fault that they have a large population and therefore a large overall contribution.
Considering that China and India together account for about a third of the world's population and have the lowest proportional emissions of the top ten in that list, I'd be wary of knocking them too much. It would seem that they're doing a better job of limiting emissions than most, even if it's to some extent likely to be simply a byproduct of the current technological level of their population rather than intentional policy.
It will be a very long time before China (or anywhere else, for that matter) does not require fossil fuels - while nuclear energy alone could ultimately replace all fossil fuel usage, that isn't going to happen overnight. As such, I would argue that China (and indeed the rest of the world) does require fossil fuels right now, and the developing world in particular will use what they can while the alternatives are either unavailable or uneconomical.
I wouldn't say 'to some extent' - that's exactly the reason. China's CO2 emissions per capita have tripled in the last 20 years, while the US, Japan, UK etc. have all seen declines since peaks in the 60's or 70's - meanwhile, China's efforts to limit CO2 emissions have actually gone into reverse and their emissions are going back up.
The only metric that matters in terms of the climate is the total amount of CO2 in the atmosphere - it matters not who put it there. But, politically (and morally), other metrics come into play - why should one country be allowed to emit twice as much CO2 per capita as others, even if their population is only a fraction of the other country? This is why limits on emissions are almost impossible to agree, let alone enforce.
The best we can hope for is that economical alternatives to fossil fuels come online - and fast.