39 results
Search Results
2. Chinese Anti-Westernism on social media.
- Author
-
Lehman-Ludwig, Anna, Burke, Abigail, Ambler, David, and Schroeder, Ralph
- Subjects
SOCIAL media ,RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,BELT & Road Initiative ,SOFT power (Social sciences) ,COVID-19 vaccines - Abstract
The Chinese Communist Party and its supporters are increasingly using social media platforms to shape China's public image. This online image is a means of strengthening domestic nationalism and of projecting "soft power" abroad. This paper examines various forms of anti-Westernism that are central to this image-making. It analyzes several recent topics—the Belt and Road Initiative, climate change, the COVID-19 vaccine, the Beijing Olympics, and the conflict in Ukraine—on the r/Sino subreddit page of Reddit and compares them with two online news outlets, the South China Morning Post and China Daily. The paper focuses on how these media frame the contest between a rising China and a failing West, so creating a discourse that competes with the negative portrayals of China outside the country. The paper contrasts the aggressive strengthening of China's image against the West on social media with more sober accounts of the same topics in China's official media and in commercial news outlets. The contribution of the paper is to document an emerging online anti-Westernism that is playing an increasing role in the changing geopolitical landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. New Actors in the Old Hierarchies: Alliances for Low-Carbon Urban Development in Shenzhen, China.
- Author
-
Li, Yunjing
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,DEVELOPING countries ,CLIMATE change ,YOUNG workers - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Planning Education & Research is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. For an Urban Politics of Looking Elsewhere: Climate Action in Rapidly Growing Chinese Cities.
- Author
-
Castán Broto, Vanesa, Westman, Linda, and Huang, Ping
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL government ,CITIES & towns ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,URBAN climatology ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Urban areas mediate climate transformations and generate new forms of climate urbanism. Looking at climate action in the twelve fastest-growing cities in China with under one million people, this paper proposes a perspective on urban climate politics 'from elsewhere' that foregrounds the potential role of smaller urban areas in mediating climate transformations. The analysis reveals three climate action strategies that reflect practical, institutional, and personal spheres of climate transformations. Planning action in the personal sphere provides opportunities for urban transformations. A perspective 'from elsewhere' calls for greater attention to planning for diverse change strategies for climate transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Coping with Externally Imposed Energy Constraints: Competitiveness and Operational Impact of China's Top-1000 Energy-Consuming Enterprises Program.
- Author
-
Yuxian Xiao, Haitao Yin, and Moon, Jon J.
- Subjects
PROPENSITY score matching ,CLIMATE change ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ENERGY consumption ,INDUSTRIAL costs - Abstract
Global climate change has caused governments worldwide to take actions to improve their energy efficiency. This paper investigates how China's Top-1000 program, a command-and-control type of energy-saving mandate, has affected the operational choices of firms, and in turn, their profitability. We apply the propensity score matching method to find "identical twins" for the participants in the Top- 1000 program, then conduct a difference-in-differences analysis on the matched sample. Our findings suggest that the profitability of the enterprises targeted for energy savings decreased by one-third, mainly due to increased production costs. The targeted enterprises tended to increase their fixed assets per capita, which was associated with improvements in energy efficiency. Furthermore, compared to similar untargeted enterprises, there was a significant slowdown in the production growths of the targeted enterprises, raising concerns about carbon leakage due to increased production by less efficient producers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and economic growth in the United States, China, and India: A wavelet coherence approach.
- Author
-
Khochiani, Ramin and Nademi, Younes
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,ENERGY consumption ,INDUSTRIAL energy consumption ,CLIMATE change ,GROSS domestic product ,GLOBAL warming - Abstract
Climate change is one of the most dangerous threats to human beings, and therefore, it is of great importance for the researchers to inform the policy makers of the threats of climate change and global warming. One of the main causes of climate change is the greenhouse gas emissions, particularly CO
2 emissions. In this paper, we try to find a nexus between energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and economic growth in the United States, China, and India, known as three most polluting countries in the world. For this purpose, we applied the wavelet correlation and the partial wavelet coherence approaches during the period 1971–2013. The empirical results for the United States show that the GDP is positively correlated with the CO2 emissions and energy consumption in all frequencies. For China, there is a significant positive relationship between the GDP and CO2 emissions/energy consumption for the short-term horizon. However, for India, although there is a significant positive relationship between the GDP and CO2 emissions, the nexus between the GDP and the energy consumption is not clear. Furthermore, the pollution haven hypothesis was confirmed by the obtained empirical results. Based on our study, we suggest the policy makers in these three countries making supportive decisions for the producers to use modern environment-friendly technologies and renewable energies in their products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Visualizing the evolution of per capita carbon emissions of Chinese cities, 2001–2016.
- Author
-
Xiong, Weiting, Liu, Zhicheng, Wang, Shaojian, and Li, Yingcheng
- Subjects
CARBON dioxide mitigation ,POLICY sciences ,ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature - Abstract
As the world's largest carbon emitter, China is under great pressure to cut down carbon emissions. Understanding the evolution of carbon emissions across Chinese cities is important for policymakers when allocating carbon emission quota among these cities. This paper draws upon the Open-source Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO
2 to calculate city-level per capita carbon emissions in China from 2001 to 2016. Overall, we find that per capita carbon emissions of Chinese cities have been generally on the rise during the 2001–2016 period. However, there has been on average a modest decline in per capita carbon emissions of cities in China's Yangtze River Delta region and Pearl River Delta region from 2011 to 2016, after a remarkable increase during the 2001–2011 period. Besides, the average north-south gap has been enlarged, with northern cities having a relatively higher level of per capita carbon emissions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A better understanding of the role of new energy and green finance to help achieve carbon neutrality goals, with special reference to China.
- Author
-
Feng Kong
- Subjects
- *
CARBON offsetting , *ENERGY consumption , *CLEAN energy , *INDUSTRIAL energy consumption , *SUSTAINABLE development , *CLIMATE change , *FINANCIAL policy - Abstract
Carbon neutrality is an important policy in the current global response to climate change and has been widely recognized by various industries. In the process of promoting carbon neutrality, new energy plays a pivotal role. In this study, the definition and connotation of new energy and its role and specific operation in the energy transition of carbon neutrality are firstly explained. Promoting new energy development requires significant green and low-carbon investments. Taking China as an example, this paper analyzes the opportunities brought by the carbon neutral process to the field of green finance and analyzes the main features and development trends of green finance in China at present. Then this paper proposes policy recommendations to strengthen the development of green finance in China in terms of improving the green financial policy system, enhancing the supply capacity of green financial services, and optimizing the supporting environment for green financial development. Finally, this paper analyzes the measures and experiences of the United States in promoting low-carbon development and proposes countermeasures for China's low-carbon development on the basis of the five major relationships that need attention in China's carbon-neutral process. That is, strengthen the top-level design and improve the regulatory policy system; optimize the energy structure and increase the proportion of clean energy; optimize the industrial structure and reduce energy consumption in key industries; build a complete low-carbon technology system and promote low-carbon technology research and development and demonstration applications, and encourage local conditions to explore low-carbon development paths. The development of green finance can contribute to the advancement of new energy technologies, thus contributing to the achievement of carbon neutrality goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. China-Europe Relations in the Mitigation of Climate Change: A Conceptual Framework.
- Author
-
BERGER, Axel, FISCHER, Doris, LEMA, Rasmus, SCHMITZ, Hubert, and URBAN, Frauke
- Subjects
CLIMATE change mitigation ,RENEWABLE energy industry ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,EMPIRICAL research ,FINANCE - Abstract
Despite the large-scale investments of both China and the EU in climate-change mitigation and renewable-energy promotion, the prevailing view on China-EU relations is one of conflict rather than cooperation. In order to evaluate the prospects of cooperation between China and the EU in these policy fields, empirical research has to go beyond simplistic narratives. This paper suggests a conceptual apparatus that will help researchers better understand the complexities of the real world. The relevant actors operate at different levels and in the public and private sectors. The main message of the paper is that combining the multilevel governance and value-chain approaches helps clarify the multiple relationships between these actors [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Global Climate Change Mitigation: Strategic Incentives.
- Author
-
Perdana, Sigit and Tyers, Rod
- Subjects
CLIMATE change mitigation ,CLIMATE change ,NET present value ,MULTIPLAYER games ,ECONOMIC models ,ABATEMENT (Atmospheric chemistry) - Abstract
Central to global agreement on carbon emissions are strategic interactions amongst regions over abatement policy and the benefits to be shared. These are re-examined in this paper, in which benefits from mitigation stem from a meta-analysis that links carbon concentration with region-specific measures of economic welfare. Implementation costs are then drawn from a highly disaggregated model of global economic performance. Multiplayer games are then constructed, the results from which are sensitive to embodied temperature scenarios and discount rates but robustly reveal that the U.S. and China would be net gainers from unilateral implementation in net present value terms. The dominant strategy for all other countries is to free ride. Net gains to the three large economies are bolstered by universal adoption, which could be induced by affordable side payments. Yet the downside is that net gains to all regions are negative over two decades, rendering commitment to abatement politically difficult. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A Comprehensive Solution for Development of Large Scale Grid-Connected PV Generation in China.
- Author
-
Qiankun, Wang
- Subjects
PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation ,CLIMATE change ,EXPORT marketing ,DUMPING (International trade) ,ELECTRIC industries - Abstract
To combat climate change and fulfill the national target of having 15% of primary energy from non-fossil fuels by 2020, China's central government is making every effort to promote PV generation, especially in the context of deteriorating export markets for China's PV industry, resulting from anti-dumping and anti-subsidy campaigns launched by United States and European Union. PV generation PV generation is set to boom in coming years in China.Although there is ambitious planning of building large scale ground-mounted PV plants in the Northwest of China, more than half of the installations are expected to be customer-sited small scale distributed systems. Because PV generation, particularly customer-sited PV systems represents a totally new pattern of power production and consumption. China's electricity system, which has been originally designed for centralized power delivery, is not fully prepared to accommodate large scale PV generation from the technical point of view. Besides, governmental policies and operational regulations are not able to match the need of these new comers.This paper works out a comprehensive solution for integration of large scale distributed PV, which consists of technical strategy, regulatory strategy and policy strategy. Firstly, electricity grids and PV systems should be directionally technically adapted to each other. oGrid friendly PV plants" requires that PV plants should be equipped with advanced technologies to improve the visibility, controllability and predictability, bringing the performance of PV plants increasingly close to that of conventional power plants. Secondly, with high penetration of distributed PV generation, grid dispatch centers should have necessary monitoring and control over these dispersed generating systems, which are supposed to follow the instructions issued by grid operators. Thirdly, incentive polies should be in accordance with national medium-and long term planning, with consideration of minimizing social cost. Policies should also be foreseeable and persistent for all the investors.Based on the framework of the comprehensive solution for PV generation, this paper elaborates major experience drawn from Germany with high PV penetration and illustrates how Germany has successfully integrated large scale distributed PV systems from the technical, regulatory and policy aspect respectively. Finally, it comes up with relevant recommendations for the development of PV generation in China: to speed up the process of establishing and improving the system of technical requirements, to draw up and release detailed operational rules on distributed PV generating systems and replace unified FIT for ground-mounted systems with differentiated FIT. Distributed customer-sited PV systems should be promoted by subsidizing the self-consumed electricity in the form of RMB cent per kWh. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Climate Change and the Limits to the Growth-Oriented Model of Development: The Case of China and India.
- Author
-
Piovani, Chiara and Li, Minqi
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,CLIMATE change ,CHINESE economic policy ,TWENTY-first century ,INDIAN economic policy ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,INDIAN economy, 1991- ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper discusses the interplay between the rise of China and India in the world economy and the global climate emergency. It considers alternative growth scenarios for China and India. The results show that, to meet their respective global climate obligations, both China and India need to accept much slower economic growth rates and possibly economic stagnation in the coming decades. This clearly indicates that both China and India need to revise their growth-oriented model of development. Only a new development strategy focused on social and environmental progress, rather than economic growth, can be compatible with climate stabilization. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Evolution of Environmental Policy in the People's Republic of China.
- Author
-
Edmonds, Richard Louis
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ATTENTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,DEBATE ,CIVIL society ,BIODEGRADATION - Abstract
This paper outlines how the evolution of China's policy and study of the environment are reflected in the scholarly literature, paying special attention to the impact of the country's environmental developments on international relations. In particular, it examines accounts of how China has moved from an isolated national scientific and environmental control infrastructure into the centre of international environmental debates as its society has opened and the geographical scale of ecological problems has expanded. The paper also identifies the continuing inhibitors to China's ability to control environmental degradation - including lack of transparency, elite manipulation, and bureaucratic weaknesses - despite the opening of China's system to limited participation of civil society in its environmental debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The effect of extreme temperature on electricity consumption, air pollution, and gross domestic product.
- Author
-
Huang, Kuei-Ying, Chiu, Yung-ho, Chang, Tzu-Han, and Lin, Tai-Yu
- Subjects
AIR pollution ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,GROSS domestic product ,GLOBAL temperature changes ,CLIMATE extremes ,GLOBAL warming ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
The Report: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) set a goal global warming of 1.5°C on global temperature change. Extreme climate changes have increased the demand for electricity consumption by people and enterprises. In fact, China's total power generation in 2019 exceeded 25% of the world's amount, and its thermal power generation accounted for more than 70%. Although past research on electricity efficiency seldom discusses the issue of climate change, the topic still remains important. This research thus considers extreme temperature days (climate change variable) as exogenous variable and uses the Two-Stage Meta Under exogenous undesirable EBM model to examine power efficiency in China. The results are as follows. (1) In the west only Qinghai's GDP, CO
2 , PM2.5 , and electricity consumption have technology gap ratio (TGR) efficiency values of 1 in the 5 years. (2) China's electricity consumption has the same trend with the TGR efficiency of CO2 and is higher than PM2.5 . (3) The national overall efficiency, meta overall efficiency, and TGR overall efficiency are the worst in China's west region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A Climate for Change? Critical Reflections on the Durban United Nations Climate Change Conference.
- Author
-
Banerjee, Subhabrata Bobby
- Subjects
EMISSION control ,CLIMATE change ,GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
Despite more than fifteen years of high level efforts led by the United Nations to broker a binding agreement on emissions reduction, negotiations at every annual meeting have failed to establish a global agreement, mainly due to significant disagreements between industrialized and developing countries over differentiated responsibilities in reducing emissions. In this paper I describe my experiences as a participant-observer at the 17th United Nations Climate Change summit held in Durban, South Africa, during December 2011. I provide a critical analysis of the political economy of climate change and discuss power dynamics between market, state and civil society actors as well as the shifting geopolitics that mark the emergence of China and India as major players in the climate change arena. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The local environmental regulatory regime in China: changes in pro-environment orientation, institutional capacity, and external political support in Guangzhou.
- Author
-
Francesch-Huidobro, Maria, Carlos Wing-Hung Lo, and Shui-Yan Tang
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,ENVIRONMENTAL agencies ,ENVIRONMENTAL regulations ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
In the fi rst decade of this millennium China has demonstrated a stronger commitment to environmental protection. Yet, there remains a signifi cant gap between environmental laws and regulations and the quality of the environment. In this paper, we propose an integrated framework for analysis that we apply to investigate the factors that account for this gap in implementation. We analyse the results of surveys conducted in 2000 and 2006 and interviews carried out in 2006 and 2007 in eleven jurisdictions of Guangzhou municipality on three factors: pro-environment orientation, institutional capacity, and external political support for environmental units. The results show that, after several decades of environmental protection regulations, the pro-environment orientation of environmental offi cials in Guangzhou has been strengthened, whereas the institutional capacity of environmental agencies, although often beefed up in real terms, remains inadequate due to the heightened expectations of state and society actors. It is the external political support received by environmental agencies that drives the success or failure of environmental protection enforcement. More often than not, the strength or weakness of political support is embedded in the policy design and implementation structure and is associated with the policy orientation of political leaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. China's Climate- and Energy-security Dilemma: Shaping a New Path of Economic Growth.
- Author
-
Hallding, Karl, Guoyi Han, and Olsson, Marie
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in China ,ECONOMIC development ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENERGY policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
China is undergoing modernization at a scale and speed the world has never witnessed. As climate change increasingly dominates the global agenda, China faces the challenge of shaping a new growth path in a climate-constrained world. The paper argues that China's current climate and energy policy is, at best, a "repackaging" of existing energy and environmental strategies with co-benefits for the mitigation of climate change. Nevertheless, even though policies are not climate-change driven, the quick (rhetorical) endorsement of low-carbon development and the strong momentum of green technologies indicate that political ambitions are in favour of finding a more sustainable development pathway. A new growth path would, however, require a fundamental shift, with development and energy strategies being set within climate security constraints. The eventual success of this new path remains uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Forecasting China's Carbon Intensity: Is China on Track to Comply with Its Copenhagen Commitment?
- Author
-
Yuan Yang, Junjie Zhang, and Can Wang
- Subjects
CARBON dioxide ,ENERGY consumption ,EUROPEAN currency unit - Abstract
In the 2009 Copenhagen Accord, China agreed to slash its carbon intensity (carbon dioxide emissions/GDP) by 40% to 45% from the 2005 level by 2020. We assess whether China can achieve the target under the business-as-usual scenario by forecasting its emissions from energy consumption. Our preferred model shows that China's carbon intensity is projected to decline by only 33%. The results imply that China needs additional mitigation effort to comply with the Copenhagen commitment. The emission growth is more than triple the emission reductions that the European Union and the United States have committed to in the same period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. COMPARING MEDIA FRAMINGS OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN DEVELOPED, RAPID GROWTH AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: FINDINGS FROM NORWAY, CHINA AND GHANA.
- Author
-
Midttun, Atle, Coulter, Paddy, Gadzekpo, Audrey, and Jin Wang
- Subjects
CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENERGY consumption ,ENVIRONMENTAL law ,CARBON pricing ,RENEWABLE energy industry - Abstract
This article undertakes a systematic study of press articles on climate change in the rich West (Norway), the emerging East (China) and the developing South (Ghana) to explore the cognitive basis for collective climate policy action. Newspapers depict Ghana moving out of a climate-victimhood towards a more active climate policy for development; China figures as spearheading energy efficiency and clean technologies for growth; while Norway is described as exporting its climate action. Our analysis finds little common ground for climate mitigation through binding climate emission limits and carbon pricing. A pluralistic 'green growth' strategy would have greater chances of success. The article also highlights differences in sources and story types: Norway features much enterprising journalism, and academics are the dominant source. In China and Ghana most articles are routinized, with politicians and public officials dominating in China, whilst the press makes heavy use of international sources in Ghana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Political Ambiguity in Chinese Climate Change Discourses.
- Author
-
LO, ALEX Y.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,POLITICAL debates ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,ACTIVISM - Abstract
China's political environment offers limited space for critical debates on domestic politics. In such a constrained environment, people tend to represent and articulate climate change issues without explicitly addressing their political aspects. The aim of this paper is to examine this political ambiguity in climate change discourses. Q methodology was employed to elicit the subjective positions of forty-five young and educated Chinese individuals. Three discourses were extracted: namely, prosaic environmentalism, co-operative economic optimism and actor scepticism. These discourses do not indicate critical intent and deep engagement in the political arguments regarding climate change. This raises concern about the growth of climate citizenship within the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The predicted effect of climate change on indoor overheating of heritage apartments in two different Chinese climate zones.
- Author
-
Lei, Muxi, van Hooff, Twan, Blocken, Bert, and Pereira Roders, Ana
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,THERMAL comfort ,BUILDING envelopes ,HOT weather conditions ,LIVING rooms ,SUMMER ,APARTMENTS - Abstract
Understanding the effects of climate change on building indoor thermal conditions is of importance for providing a comfortable thermal environment for occupants. Some multi-family dwellings have already been listed as heritage in China (hereinafter referred to as heritage apartments), limiting modifications to the building envelope. However, the effect of climate change on thermal comfort in heritage apartments with a compact interior (i.e. without a living room) built before the 1980s in different Chinese climate zones has seldom been studied. This study focuses on the current and future thermal comfort in two-bedroom heritage apartments in China. The study was conducted for two different Chinese climate zones, that is, a cold climate zone (Beijing), and a hot summer and cold winter climate zone (Shanghai) and both current climate scenarios (typical meteorological years) and future climate scenarios (2050) were used. The results indicate, among other things, increases of 58%–60% and 41%–44% in the predicted average number of overheating hours in 2050 compared to the current climate for the studied bedrooms on the first floor in dwellings in Beijing and Shanghai, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Ecological uncivilisation: Precarious world-making after progress.
- Author
-
Savransky, Martin
- Subjects
IMAGINATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL responsibility ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
Responding to the proposition that learning to live in the Anthropocene involves learning how to die, this article problematises the modes of world-making upheld in some of the contemporary proposals for the global reorganisation of societies towards just, socio-ecological transitions beyond the techno-fixes of geoengineering, green growth, and their attendant ideals of progress. Specifically, it critically examines one such proposal that, inspired by process philosophy, has proven deeply influential in China's recent shift in ecological (geo)politics: the idea of an 'ecological civilisation' based on principles of ontological relationality, democratic responsibility, and a new alliance between the sciences and the humanities. The article argues that while such a project rejects the substantive values of modern progress, its regulative notion of civilisation retains the modern story of progress as a mode of valuation and therefore reinscribes imperial, colonial values at the heart of ecology. In response, the article suggests that learning to die in the wake of ecological devastation requires making life outside the modern coordinates of progress, which is to say living without the ideal of civilisation. Seeking to expand the political imagination at a time of socio-ecological transformations, it calls for 'ecological uncivilisation' as a permanent experimentation with improbable forms of world-making and methodologies of life that are envisaged thanks to ongoing histories of decolonisation and not in spite of them; that strive to live and die well but not always better. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Effect of Human Capital on CO2 Emissions: Macro Evidence from China.
- Author
-
Yao Yao, Lin Zhang, Salim, Ruhul, and Rafiq, Shuddhasattwa
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,YOUNG workers ,GREENHOUSE gases ,ECONOMIC expansion ,INPUT-output analysis - Abstract
We study the effect of human capital on CO
2 emissions using the Chinese provincial panel over the period 1997-2016. Allowing for cross-sectional dependence and structural breaks, we find a negative association between human capital and CO2 emissions in the long run and attribute it to the influences from younger workers and workers with advanced human capital. In particular, our results suggest that a one-year increase in average schooling reduces CO2 emissions by 12 per cent. Using disaggregated emission dataset by energy sources and end emitters, we demonstrate this negative association is likely to manifest through technology effect and the improvement in energy efficiency. These manifestations are limited to production sector. Our finding suggests a promising avenue for abating greenhouse gases without impeding economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Climate change in China: A study of news diversity in party-sponsored and market-oriented newspapers.
- Author
-
Duan, Ran and Miller, Serena
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,NEWSPAPERS ,MARKET orientation ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations - Abstract
Chinese news publications potentially play a crucial role in mitigating global climate change. Presently, the majority of scholars treat the Chinese news media system as one single entity. We expect, however, Chinese party-sponsored and market-oriented newspapers differ in their representation of climate change. Using the conceptual framework of news diversity, we examined how Chinese journalists reported on climate change by examining their use of media frames, source types, and multiple viewpoints in news articles. The results revealed that market-oriented newspapers were indeed significantly different by including more diverse viewpoints, conflict frames, and environmental nongovernmental organizational sources, while party-sponsored newspapers employed more domestic political, science, and scientific uncertainty frames. The results suggest that researchers should be cautious about generalizing past findings to the entire Chinese media ecosystem because it is unique, diverse, and complex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. How a Deadly Pandemic Cleared the Air: Narratives and Practices Linking COVID-19 with Air Pollution and Climate Change.
- Author
-
Bogdan, Eva Angelyna
- Subjects
AIR pollution ,COVID-19 ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CLIMATE change ,BLACK Death pandemic, 1348-1351 - Abstract
The recent COVID-19 pandemic revealed the intricate connections between human and planetary health. Air pollution cleared over the countries ordering lockdowns of nonessential businesses to flatten the curve of the pandemic. The links between pandemics and pollution are not obvious at first, yet the two phenomena have several characteristics in common. Both pandemics and pollution originate from specific locations but then spread globally, and both are human-induced rather than natural–hazard disasters. I examine narratives and practices linking COVID-19 with air pollution and climate change as the pandemic unfolds. I compare these findings with research on the Black Death plague in Europe and the air pollution in China's Haze City. Applying the analytical frameworks from these two studies, I analyze media articles and reports on COVID-19 to explore risk experience, stress behaviours, and resistant discourse during the adaptive cycles of the pandemic to gain insights into current and future changes to sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Challenges and adaptation to urban climate change in China: A viewpoint of urban climate and urban planning.
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,URBAN climatology ,URBAN heat islands ,CLIMATE change ,METEOROLOGICAL charts ,AIR quality management - Abstract
In China, urban climatic factors are seldom taken into account in urban planning and urban management due to the lack of basic data, as well as practical evaluation tool to bridge the gap between climatic data and urban planning. Comprehensive surveys were performed to determine residential environment factors, such as urban thermal comfort environment, urban air quality, urban wind environment and urban short-term heavy precipitation disasters, at community scale. A standard of urban climate environment map and an atlas of climate environment in the typical cities were then compiled to encourage urban environmental adaptation. The state council has approved the "China's National Plan on Climate Change (2014-2020)"[20] in 2014, with the goal of reducing CO SB 2 sb emissions per unit GDP by up to 45% by 2020, limiting the energy- and emission-intensive industries, promoting the utilization of new energy sources and improving adaptation to climate change. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Willingness to Pay for Climate Change Mitigation: Evidence from China.
- Author
-
Yujie Li, Xiaoyi Mu, Schiller, Anita, and Baowei Zheng
- Subjects
WILLINGNESS to pay ,CARBON dioxide ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
China has become the largest emitter of carbon dioxide in the world. However, the Chinese public's willingness to pay (WTP) for climate change mitigation is, at best, under-researched. This study draws upon a large national survey of Chinese public cognition and attitude towards climate change and analyzes the determinants of consumers' WTP for energy-efficient and environment-friendly products. Eighty-five percent of respondents indicate that they are willing to pay at least 10 percent more than the market price for these products. The econometric analysis indicates that income, education, age and gender, as well as public awareness and concerns about climate change are significant factors influencing WTP. Respondents who are more knowledgeable and more concerned about the adverse effect of climate change show higher WTP. In comparison, income elasticity is small. The results are robust to different model specifications and estimation techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Climate Change, Water Quality, and Water-Related Diseases in the Mekong Delta Basin: A Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Phung, Dung, Huang, Cunrui, Rutherford, Shannon, Chu, Cordia, Wang, Xiaoming, and Nguyen, Minh
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,CLIMATOLOGY ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,PUBLIC health ,WATER ,AQUATIC microbiology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Mekong Delta Basin (MDB) is vulnerable to extreme climate and hydrological events. The objectives of this review are to understand of water related health effects exacerbated by climate change and the gaps of knowledge on the relationships between climate conditions, water quality, and water-related diseases in the MDB. The findings indicate that a few studies with qualitative emphases on the relationships between climate and water quality have been conducted in MDB, and they are insufficient to describe the pattern of climate-disease relationship. The diseases caused by chemical contaminants in relation to changes of climate conditions are neglected in MDB. We suggest further studies to examine the influence of short-term variation of climate conditions on water quality and water-related diseases for the purpose of public health and medical prevention, and due to the trans-boundary nature of MDB, developing partnership in data sharing and research collaboration among MDBs countries should be prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A United States-China Comparison of Risk Information–Seeking Intentions.
- Author
-
Yang, Z. Janet, Kahlor, LeeAnn, and Li, Haichun
- Subjects
INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,CROSS-cultural studies ,RISK ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ATTITUDES toward the environment ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
We applied structural equation modeling to examine how the Risk Information Seeking and Processing (RISP) model predicts information-seeking intentions in the United States and China. The context for this comparison was climate change. Results indicate that in the Chinese sample, seeking intentions were less influenced by environmental attitudes, risk perceptions, negative affect, information insufficiency, and behavioral beliefs. Across the two samples, subjective norms had similar impacts on seeking intentions. Overall, the model has cross-cultural validity and applicability in accounting for risk communication behaviors in these two nations. Based on prior support for this model outside of the context of climate change, the model is well poised to serve as a framework for a variety of cross-cultural risk information–seeking contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Emerging Powers in the Climate Negotiations: Shifting Identity Conceptions.
- Author
-
Hochstetler, Kathryn and Milkoreit, Manjana
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation on climate change ,NATIONAL character ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation -- Environmental aspects ,NEGOTIATION ,COALITIONS ,BRAZILIAN foreign relations, 1985- ,FOREIGN relations of India, 1984- ,TWENTY-first century ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The BASIC countries (Brazil, China, India, South Africa) have played a major role in recent climate negotiations. We argue that a focus on identities—both their individual national identities as emerging powers and their joint identity as the BASIC coalition of emerging powers—is useful for understanding the coalition’s negotiation stances and the larger negotiation dynamics between 2009 and 2011. BASIC countries maintain a hard defining line between themselves and developed states in terms of their climate obligations but accept some differentiation between themselves and other developing countries, thus adding a destabilizing third category of countries to the climate negotiations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Survey of Experts on Climate Change Awareness and Public Participation in China.
- Author
-
KUHN, Berthold and ZHANG Yangyong
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,SOCIAL media ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,PROJECT managers ,SCHOOLS - Abstract
Climate protection issues are receiving more attention in China. Responding to this survey, 133 environmental and climate protection experts indicated that the government is a key factor in raising awareness of climate protection in China. Experts participating in the survey also referred to the role of the media - in particular social media - NGOs and educational institutions in spreading climate protection awareness. Additionally, interviews were carried out with 40 of the experts, who were grouped into different categories to discover whether there were any striking differences of opinion between experts of different backgrounds. Their assessments revealed few statistically relevant differences, though some are worth noting: Chinese researchers, project managers and representatives of NGOs were more positive than international experts regarding the impact of the Rio+20 conference on climate change discourse in China. Also, the youngest experts with the least international experience evaluated the potential of green volunteer work highest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Future Coal Production Outlooks in the IPCC Emission Scenarios: Are they Plausible?
- Author
-
Höök, Mikael
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,CARBON dioxide ,COAL ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
Anthropogenic climate change caused by CO2 emissions is strongly linked to the future energy production, specifically coal. The Special Report on Emission Scenarios (SRES) contains 40 scenarios for future fossil fuel production and is used by the IPCC to assess future climate change. This study examines the SRES coal production outlooks. Fundamental assumptions regarding coal availability and production in SRES was also compared with recent studies on reasonable future production outlooks. It was found that SRES puts unreasonable expectation on just a few countries. Is it reasonable to expect that China, already accounting for 46% of the global output, would increase their production by a factor of 8 over the next 90 years, as implied by certain SRES scenarios? It is concluded that SRES is underpinned by a paradigm of perpetual growth and technological optimism as well as old and outdated resource estimates. This has resulted in overoptimistic production outlooks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
33. China, the United States, and the Geopolitics of Sustainability.
- Author
-
Ross, Andrew
- Subjects
GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,CLIMATE change ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,TWENTY-first century ,UNITED States economy ,CHINA-United States relations - Abstract
In the aftermath of the financial crash of 2008, commentators speculated that the relative buoyancy of China’s economy signaled the onset of an epochal shift of world power from West to East. This article considers the evidence by reviewing the state of the Sino-American economic relationship against the backdrop of the urgency of action on climate change. The lead established by Chinese companies in the clean technology sectors underpins the PRC’s primacy in the alternative fuel economy, but political and social need for a high GDP growth rate is irreconcilable with the demand for decarbonization. By contrast, U.S. efforts to jumpstart a green industrial revolution are stymied by political resistance from oil and gas lobbies, and the longterm recovery of its economic dominance as a trade super power is in doubt. The initiative lies with Beijing, thrust, once again, into the role of making history under conditions not of its own making. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Climate Change in China -- The Development of China's Climate Policy and Its Integration into a New International Post-Kyoto Climate Regime.
- Author
-
Oberheitmann, Andreas and Sternfeld, Eva
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,CLIMATE change ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,CARBON dioxide ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
According to the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report, global emissions of carbon dioxide have to be reduced by about 80 per cent by 2050 in order to stabilise the increase in global temperature at 2 to 2.4°C by 2100 compared with its pre-industrial level. An increase of only 2°C would bring about "acceptable" negative impacts on the eco-systems and the world economy. Without a reduction in CO
2 emissions in China, however, it will be hard to achieve this goal. Currently, China is already responsible for about 50 per cent of the worldwide increase in CO2 emissions recorded over the past ten years. On the other hand, it is the industrialised countries that are mainly responsible for the greenhouse-gas emissions of earlier years. Taking the challenges of China's economic growth, its impact on future CO2 emissions and the development of China's climate policy into account, this article develops a new post- Kyoto regime based on cumulative per-capita emission rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Facing Down Armageddon: Our Environment at a Crossroads.
- Author
-
Strong, Maurice
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,UNITED Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972: Stockholm, Sweden) ,UNITED Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992). Protocols, etc., 1997 December 11 ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,GREENHOUSE gas mitigation ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article discusses global efforts to confront the challenge of climate change. A conference in Stockholm in 1972 acknowledged the problem, and in 1997 the multinational Kyoto Protocol established goals for reducing emissions. Since Kyoto rapid economic growth in India, China, and other developing nations has made action on climate change more urgent. China and the U.S. combined account for 40% of the world's greenhouse emissions. Among nations disagreement still exists as to what level emissions should be capped at.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Abstracts.
- Subjects
LAND use planning ,HIGHER education ,URBAN planning ,CITIES & towns ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on land use planning topics, including "Historical Amnesia: New Urbanism and the City of Tomorrow," "More Than Sector Theory: Homer Hoyt's Contributions to Planning Knowledge" and "Methodology for the Survival Analysis of Urban Building Stocks."
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Tibet: Plateau in Peril.
- Author
-
Zhao, Michael and Schell, Orville
- Subjects
GLACIERS & climate ,GLOBAL warming ,FLOODS ,DROUGHTS ,CLIMATE change ,RIVERS - Abstract
The article discusses the possibility that the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau could be melted by global warming. This would lead to short-term floods and long-term drought for large sections of Asia, including China and India. Scientific studies are cited which indicate that glaciers around the world began to diminish in the 1950's, staged a modest comeback in the 1970's, and rapidly began shrinking again in the 1980's. Large and geopolitically important river systems such as the Yellow River and the Mekong are dependent on water from the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Weather and the Transmission of Bacillary Dysentery in Jinan, Northern China: A Time-Series Analysis.
- Author
-
Ying Zhang, Peng Bi and Hiller, Janet E.
- Subjects
WEATHER ,SHIGELLOSIS ,TIME series analysis ,TEMPERATURE ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Objectives. This article aims to quantify the relationship between weather variations and bacillary dysentery in Jinan, a city in northern China with a temperate climate, to reach a better understanding of the effect of weather variations on enteric infections. Methods. The weather variables and number of cases of bacillary dysentery during the period 1987-2000 has been studied on a monthly basis. The Spearman correlation between each weather variable and dysentery cases was conducted. Seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average (SARIMA) models were used to perform the regression analyses. Results. Maximum temperature (one-month lag), minimum temperature (one-month lag), rainfall (one-month lag), relative humidity (without lag), and air pressure (one-month lag) were all significantly correlated with the number of dysentery cases in Jinan. After controlling for the seasonality, lag time, and long-term trend, the SARIMA model suggested that a 1°C rise in maximum temperature might relate to more than 10% (95% confidence interval 10.19, 12.69) increase in the cases of bacillary dysentery in this city. Conclusions. Weather variations have already affected the transmission of bacillary dysentery in China. Temperatures could be used as a predictor of the number of dysentery cases in a temperate city in northern China. Public health interventions should be undertaken at this stage to adapt and mitigate the possible consequences of climate change in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. China's Climate Change Positions: At a Turning Point?
- Author
-
Tangen, Kristian, Heggelund, Gorild, and Buen, Jorund
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
Examines China's policies on climatic changes. Key issues of interest; Analysis of pertinent topics and relevant issues; Implications on the energy industries and environmental protection.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.