China and India are Fast-Growing Polluters, World Bank Says
May 11, 2006 — By Deborah Zabarenko, Reuters
WASHINGTON — Greenhouse gas
pollution from China and India rose steeply over the last decade, but rich
countries, including the United States, remain the world's biggest polluters, a
World Bank official said Wednesday.
The United States accounts for nearly a quarter -- 24 percent -- of all
emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas linked to global warming,
said Steen Jorgensen, the bank's acting vice-president for sustainable
development.
The countries of the European Monetary Union contribute 10 percent.
But China and India are catching up.
"(Greenhouse gas emissions from) China and India are growing very rapidly
at the moment, very much because of inefficient investments in energy, in power
generation," said Jorgensen.
China, the world's second-largest polluter after the United States, increased
carbon dioxide emissions by 33 percent between 1992 and 2002, according to the
bank's "Little Green Data Book," a survey of world environmental
impact released Tuesday. India's emissions rose 57 percent over the same
period.
Jorgensen said those likely to suffer most from the consequences of these
emissions, including the increasingly severe weather patterns associated with
global climate change, are farmers in the poorest parts of the world.
'GLOOM AND DOOM'
"The gloom and doom (is) if you are a farmer on a small island state
somewhere, looking at sea level rise, looking at more severe weather -- those
are really the people we should be concerned about," Jorgensen said in a
telephone interview from New York. "It's an unequal distribution of the
people who pollute and the people who suffer from the pollution."
He said the main reason emissions from China and India are rising so fast
compared to the rest of the world, which had a 15 percent rise in carbon
dioxide emissions between 1992 and 2002, was older, inefficient coal-fired
power plants in both countries.
While cleaner coal-fired plants are possible, India and China cannot afford to
make the switch.
"They can't afford to take (the old, heavily polluting power plants) out
of commission to repair them because basically, if you don't have power for
even three months, that has huge economic costs for them," Jorgensen said.
Even as emissions rose rapidly in these two growing economies, the growth of
emissions slowed in some of the richest industrialized nations, the bank's
report found. And still, people in the developed world used about 11 times as
much energy per person as those in poor countries, Jorgensen said.
More information and a link to the report are available online at
www.worldbank.org/environmental indicators.
Source: Reuters