Green growth stalling in India and China, sending world towards 6C of warming
Joydeep Gupta
World is on a path towards six degrees celsius of warming by end of the century, with emissions in China and India continuing to rise, according to a report from PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
Strong GDP growth in China and India was coupled with rapid carbon emissions growth last year (Image by Adam Cohn)
Read: China losing 1.4% of GDP to climate change and reliance on carbon
The challenge to decouple emissions from economic growth is not easy for these emerging economies. The report points out that China and India are expected to nearly double the size of their economies by the end of the decade, but emissions must level off soon for them to meet their targets. This means the majority of any new energy demand will have to be met from renewable energy and not fossil fuel generation (unless this can be fitted with carbon capture and storage).
|
Country |
Change in energy emissions 2010-2011 |
GDP growth 2010-2011 |
|
Change in carbon intensity 2010-2011 |
Annual average change 2000-2011 |
Required annual decarbonisation rate 2012-2050 |
|
France |
-6.1% |
1.7% |
|
-7.7% |
-2.4% |
-4.4% |
|
UK |
-6.4% |
0.7% |
|
-7.0% |
-2.8% |
-5.2% |
|
Germany |
-3.6% |
3% |
|
-6.4% |
-2.2% |
-5.2% |
|
Indonesia |
0.9% |
6.5% |
|
-5.2% |
-1.0% |
-4.9% |
|
EU |
-3.6% |
1.5% |
|
-5.1% |
-2.3% |
-5.2% |
|
USA |
-1.9% |
1.7% |
|
-3.5% |
-2.1% |
-5.2% |
|
Italy |
-2.5% |
0.4% |
|
-2.9% |
-1.2% |
-4.3% |
|
Mexico |
1.7% |
3.9% |
|
-2.1% |
-0.2% |
-4.6% |
|
South Africa |
1.5% |
3.1% |
|
-1.6% |
-1.4% |
-5.6% |
|
Russia |
2.9% |
4.3% |
|
-1.6% |
-3.9% |
-6.0% |
|
Brazil |
1.7% |
2.7% |
|
-1.0% |
-0.7% |
-4.1% |
|
Argentina |
7.9% |
8.9% |
|
-0.9% |
-1.6% |
-5.0% |
|
South Korea |
2.9% |
3.6% |
|
-0.7% |
-1.0% |
-6.5% |
|
Canada |
2.0% |
2.5% |
|
-0.4% |
-1.4% |
-5.3% |
|
Saudi Arabia |
6.7% |
6.8% |
|
0.0% |
-1.9% |
-7.0% |
|
India |
6.9% |
6.9% |
|
0.0% |
-1.4% |
-4.4% |
|
Turkey |
8.6% |
8.5% |
|
0.1% |
-0.5% |
-5.0% |
|
China |
9.4% |
9.1% |
|
0.2% |
-1.4% |
-6.1% |
|
Japan |
0.1% |
-0.7% |
|
0.8% |
-0.8% |
-4.8% |
|
Spain |
2.2% |
0.7% |
|
1.5% |
-1.9% |
-3.6% |
|
Australia |
8.7% |
1.8% |
|
6.7% |
-1.7% |
-5.3% |
|
World |
3.0% |
3.7% |
|
-0.7% |
-0.8% |
-5.1% |
Source: PwC’s analysis, data from World Bank (2012) and BP Statistical Review (2012)
Scientists have been warning that a global temperature rise of over 2 degrees Celsius will have unforeseen and potentially catastrophic effects. All governments have agreed to keep the rise within 2 degrees, but their collective commitments fall short of that goal by as much as 40%. The report says, “Even more worryingly, with eight years to go, it is questionable whether several of these pledges can be met.” It adds, “In some respects the economic downturn may make these absolute pledges less challenging; but at the same time economic pressures may make it much harder to finance the necessary transition towards a low carbon economy.”





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