China to embark on path of 'green rise' (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-06-19 10:12
A senior Chinese official in charge of environmental protection Saturday
warned that environmental crisis coupled with many social problems will come
earlier than expected if the country fails to embark on a path of "green rise"
immediately.
Pan Yue, deputy director of the State Environmental Protection Administration
(SEPA), said at the Seventh Green China Forum, which started here Saturday, that
although China has become the biggest manufacturer in the world after
experiencing rapid economic development over the past 20 years, it "has paid a
high environmental price".
The forum has attracted more than 200 governmental officials, experts and
business people to discuss ways to sustainably develop the country.
Pan said that serious pollution is occurring in a China with a per capita GDP
lingering between 400 and 1000 US dollars, whereas it emerged in western
countries when the per capita GDP was 3,000 to 10,000 dollars.
"The pollution load of China will quadruple in 2020 when the country's GDP
quadruples if the pace of pollution remains unchanged." By then, China will only
have six out of the current 45 major mineral resources, Pan said.
China ranks first in daily water consumption and sewage discharge, and second
in energy consumption and carbon dioxide discharge. Its energy consumption is
seven times that of Japan, six times that of the United States and 2.8 times
that of India interms of unit GDP.
China currently has a population of 1.3 billion, compared to the 600 million
it had when New China was founded in 1949. But land suitable for people to live
has shrunk from six million square kilometers to the current three million
square kilometers due to serious soil erosion.
Pan added that people should not be happy about China being called "the World
Factory" like we were several years ago, since China only makes "low grade
industrial products" for the developedcountries "by using our own resources".
Pan criticized the view of developing first and preventing and controlling
pollution later, saying it is "absolutely wrong".
Pan urged that China should embark on the path of a "green rise" to calmly
face the "green barrier" erected by the developed countries and pledged that
China will honor all signed international pacts on environmental protection like
the Kyoto protocol.
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