China burns more fossil fuels than any other nation, making it the planet's top source of the greenhouse gases that are warming the earth and its voracious appetite for electricity is only growing
Construction on the Zhongtang gas-fired power plant in Dongguan, China, one of several new gas plants being built in the area to meet the country’s energy needs as it pivots from coal, Sept. 28, 2021. It’s one of several huge gas-fired plants being built to pump more electricity throughout this sprawling industrial city of about 10 million, where rising demand for power has led to rationing and blackouts that are now rippling across eastern China and threaten international supply chains.
Image: Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times
DONGGUAN, China — On the northern edge of a vast Chinese factory city, welding torches gleam as workers finish construction on a gas-fired power plant to replace one that burned coal and blanketed the surrounding neighborhood in a sooty pall.
It is one of several huge gas-fired plants being built to pump more electricity throughout this sprawling industrial city of about 10 million, where rising demand for power has led to rationing and blackouts that are now rippling across eastern China and threaten international supply chains.
This archipelago of power plants underlines an unsettling reality in the global fight to slow climate change. China burns more fossil fuels than any other nation, making it the planet’s top source of the greenhouse gases that are warming the Earth. And its voracious appetite for electricity is only growing.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has promised that his country will start reducing carbon dioxide and other gases generated by burning coal, gas and oil by 2030 and then stop adding them to the atmosphere altogether by 2060. But climate scientists warn that nations must make a sharp turn away from fossil fuels now in order to avert the most catastrophic consequences of climate change.
Just weeks before a critical U.N. climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, attention is riveted on China and whether it will do more to cut emissions. The world’s top energy agency said last week that China “has the means and capacity” to reduce its pollution. Its actions could be consequential for the planet’s climate, already at a pivotal moment.
©2019 New York Times News Service