Climate change: could China lead the world's fight?

中国如何主导气候战

Drum Tower

2024-11-20

28 分钟
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单集简介 ...

LONGi is one of the world's biggest solar manufacturers. At its headquarters in Shaanxi province, robots turn slices of silicon into solar cells around the clock. Companies like LONGi have helped China become a clean-energy powerhouse. The solar panels and lithium-ion batteries the country produces are crucial for greening the world's economies.   But China is also the world's biggest emitter of carbon dioxide. Shaanxi province is home to a thriving coal industry. And China's love affair with the stuff is far from over: last year, on average, two new coal-fired power plants were approved every week. The country has work to do if it's to hit Xi Jinping's target of being carbon-neutral by 2060.   In the final days of the COP29 conference, Alice Su, The Economist's senior China correspondent, and Gabriel Crossley, our correspondent based in Beijing, examine China's climate policy and ask: what's stopping the country from leading the world's fight against climate change? For more on COP29, check out the latest episodes of our sister podcasts: “Babbage” looks at how to wean countries off coal, while “Money Talks” counts the cost of the energy transition. Transcripts of our podcasts are available via economist.com/podcasts. Listen to what matters most, from global politics and business to science and technology—subscribe to Economist Podcasts+. 
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单集文稿 ...

  • The Economist.

  • China is a green energy powerhouse.

  • It is the world's top producer of lithium-ion batteries, solar panels, and electric vehicles.

  • It's pumping out the technologies needed to save the planet faster and more cheaply than anywhere else.

  • But China is also a major greenhouse gas emitter.

  • It's responsible for more than a quarter of total global emissions each year.

  • And there are geopolitical obstacles to Chinese technologies being adopted,

  • at the rate needed to hit carbon reduction targets.

  • I'm Alice Su, The Economist's senior China correspondent,

  • and I'm joined by Gabriel Crossley, our China correspondent based in Beijing.

  • This week, as the world grapples with how to reduce emissions at COP29, the UN's annual climate summit,

  • we're discussing the crucial role China plays in combating climate change.

  • We're asking, what's stopping it from leading the world's fight?

  • This is Drum Tower from The Economist.

  • Hello Gabriel, good to see you. How are you doing?

  • Hi Alice, I'm good thanks.

  • I'm in Shanghai this week instead of Beijing.

  • I forget, did you used to live here?

  • Did you spend some time here before?

  • Yeah, I did.