from Dean Baker
One of the Trump
administration’s talking points about global warming is that we’re reducing
greenhouse gas emissions, while the countries that remain in the Paris accord
are not. Well, the first part of this story is clearly not true, as data for
2018 show
a large rise in emissions for the United States. The second part is
also not very accurate, as most other countries are taking large steps to
reduce emissions.
At the top of the list is
China. The country has undertaken a massive push to convert to electric powered
vehicles and clean energy sources.
China’s progress in this
effort is truly extraordinary. In the case of electric cars, it has used a
carrot-and-stick approach where it offers consumers large subsidies for buying
electric cars while also requiring manufacturers to meet quotas for electric
car production as a percent of their total fleet of cars. It has also invested
in the necessary infrastructure, ensuring that there are a large number of
charging stations widely dispersed across the country so that drivers don’t
have to worry about being unable to recharge their cars.
The result has been a massive
increase in the sale of electric cars. Electric car sales are
projected to be 1.1 million this year, almost equal to sales in the
rest of the world combined. The country expects sales to continue to rise
rapidly, with annual sales hitting 11.5 million in 2030. By comparison,
electric car sales are expected to be just 480,000 in the United States this
year, less than half the number in China.
There is a similar story with
solar and wind energy. China added more
solar capacity last year than the rest of the world combined. In 2018 it
already surpassed the
goal it had set for 2020. It is now looking to double its capacity over the
next two years.
China also has almost as much wind
power capacity as the rest of the world combined. Its capacity is more than
three times as great as in the United States. However, even with the
extraordinary growth in clean energy, wind and solar together still account for less than 20 percent
of China’s generation capacity and less than half the amount of electricity
produced by burning coal.
Nonetheless, China’s enormous
progress in promoting electric cars and clean energy should tell us a great
deal about the potential in these areas in the United States. While China’s
economy has grown rapidly over the last four decades, on a per person basis its
income is still less than one-third that of the United States.
This means that a relatively
poor country was able to make massive gains in reducing greenhouse gas
emissions compared with its baseline growth path. The focus on electric cars
and clean energy also did not impair the country’s growth in any obvious way.
Over the last decade, China’s
GDP growth has averaged
7.9 percent annually. Perhaps there is a story where China’s economy would
have grown even more rapidly without the subsidies and other measures to
promote green growth, but obviously, these measures could not have been very
serious impediments if the country could still sustain one of the fastest
growth stretches the world has ever seen.
If China could make such
enormous progress in a short period of time, surely the United States could
make comparable gains with the resources at its disposal. This doesn’t mean
that the necessary reductions in greenhouse gas emissions will be costless:
People will have to change lifestyles. This means doing without SUVs
and eating much less meat. But China’s success is an impressive example.
This brings up another issue
directly related to Donald Trump’s trade war with China. One of the biggest
complaints that Trump has is that China is “stealing” our technology. Most
media commentators have widely endorsed this complaint.
China already spends almost as
much as the United States on research and development. With a much
more rapidly growing economy, China is virtually certain to pass the United
States in research and development spending in the very near future, if it has
not already done so.
Rather than spending so much
effort worrying about what China is taking from us, we should be thinking about
what we can get from China, especially in the area of green technologies where
it has made such enormous progress. Rather than looking to lock up our
technologies to maximize the profits US corporations get from their patent and
copyright monopolies; a modern trade deal would look to maximize the flow of
technology across national borders.
That would be the focus of a
trade deal if we were concerned about economic prosperity and the future of the
planet. Unfortunately, that is not likely to be the agenda of the people
involved in trade negotiations.
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