strvgglecity t1_j6ya4wq wrote
Reply to comment by Bewaretheicespiders in Are cultural changes more important than technological ones to solve environmental and capitalism issues? by G-Funk_with_2Bass
Allow me to introduce you to facts. https://www.politico.com/news/2022/08/20/china-clean-energy-ira-climate-00052684
They are building coal plants. Which European countries also did.
BUT in terms of future planning: The share of electricity generation provided by renewables is higher in China than in the U.S., while the sheer number of solar panels and wind turbines being installed across China leaves their American rivals in the dust.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_j6yavi5 wrote
>While China leads the world in building new coal plants and accounts for around half of all the coal burned globally each year
Its about the trend. China is increasing its GHG, USA is lowering them. And yes, we should heavily tax imports from China because of this.
strvgglecity t1_j6ybugc wrote
You're completely ignoring my original comment. This is a result of the west offshoring it's factories. That's why they are building coal plants - so they can produce cheap goods for the profits of American owned manufacturers. If we kept production here, all those emissions and power plants would simply be here. There is no longer separation between nations when it comes to use of resources because so much commerce is international. As long as Americans buy things made in China, those emissions are ours too.
mhornberger t1_j6yz86w wrote
> This is a result of the west offshoring it's factories.
This is partly the result of offshoring. Most of China's emissions are for domestic consumption.
- Production vs. consumption-based CO₂ emissions, China
- Production vs. consumption-based CO₂ emissions, United States
- Production vs. consumption-based CO₂ emissions, Europe
And they are installing renewables hand-over fist. Their emissions are still increasing (though they may be very close to plateauing) because their overall demand is increasing still faster than they can install renewables.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_j6ycj4h wrote
Texas being at 30% renewables and growing has nothing to do with offshoring factories. Yes, everyone should stop buying stuff from China, because its a horrible dictatorship destroying the planet. That doesnt erase the domestic progress.
strvgglecity t1_j6yecvh wrote
Can you acknowledge the fact I have repeatedly stated?
This isn't my opinion.
https://ourworldindata.org/consumption-based-co2
We see that the consumption-based emissions of the US are higher than production: In 2016 the two values were 5.7 billion versus 5.3 billion tonnes – a difference of 8%. This tells us that more CO2 is emitted in the production of the goods that Americans import than in those products Americans export.
mhornberger t1_j6yysp0 wrote
Renewables specifically, yes. But the US is doing better on low-carbon energy, due to its preexisting nuclear plants.
strvgglecity t1_j72q1tq wrote
Only today. We are still the largest historical emitter, and we set the standard. We spent a century telling the whole world we are better, our way of life is the ideal, you should copy our capitalism and consumption, and now our right wing government blames china for following us. It's all so broken.
mhornberger t1_j72t3mw wrote
I don't think we had to persuade anyone else to want to be rich. People seem to like wealth, comfort, status goods, travel, etc.
No one blames China for dragging their people out of poverty. Conservatives are just using China as an excuse for the US to not invest more in clean energy. They aren't speaking in good faith, and never were. No one advocates for China to have remained poor, just as no one wants India to stay poor.
China's emissions will drop. Right now their emissions are increasing because their electricity demand is increasing faster than they can install renewables. But that won't continue forever, because energy demand doesn't keep going up forever. They're still in the process of pulling their people out of poverty.
strvgglecity t1_j7335w0 wrote
Yep. All true. Have to disagree with the implied optimism though. American culture is excess, not even just comfort anymore. Our economy operates on excess consumption. Capitalism requires excess, which causes obvious major environmental harm. It's not just energy, it's what we do with it. Never has a new utility been provided that people didn't use up and then require larger systems to provide. I'm confident that even if we solarized 100%of our energy needs, the very next day we would need more be a use we always use maximum capacity (which includes enormous amounts of waste at all levels).
I believe reducing individual consumption and desireto consume must be a goal. Otherwise we're just living on a finite planet pretending we have infinite resources.
mhornberger t1_j734m38 wrote
What is "excess"? Are you just devaluing people's wants as not being authentic, just because you don't think they should want them? People in Dubai, Tokyo, Beijing etc who are buying status or luxury goods are not "acting American." People just like that stuff.
Sumptuary laws have a long history, long predating capitalism. People have always passed judgment on desires of the rabble for luxury, status goods, and the like. So much that they sometimes passed laws trying to regulate it.
Regarding 'optimism,' I wasn't speculating about the future. I was pointing out something that has already happened in many rich countries. There's no reason that China would be exempt from this longstanding trend.
- Total primary energy use
- Energy Use per Person (Note the decline in most of these countries. That's not my naive optimism, rather that's empirical reality.)
I think it's astounding that the US is using almost 20% less energy per person than when I was born. With BEVs and ongoing greening of the grid, that will improve yet further.
>Otherwise we're just living on a finite planet pretending we have infinite resources.
Resource use was never going to scale to infinity. Energy use plateaus. No one buys infinite blue jeans or eats infinite steaks. People like wealth, yes, but consumption does not keep spiraling upward forever. No one was under the impression that we were going to have infinite people using infinite energy per person, no more than we were going to be eating infinite gyros or infinite M&Ms.
Humans won't even last for infinite years. The sun and all the stars in the galaxy will not last for infinite years. "We can't scale x to infinity" is a given, but also not a rebuttal of anything anyone actually believes. Plus it's generally just a proxy for degrowth now, which is a different argument altogether. You don't forego building a house now just because of the truism that we can't build infinite houses.
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