For U.S. and China, World’s Biggest Climate Polluters, It’s Still Business as Usual

InsideClimate News 2013-02-04

Summary:

Despite claims of concern over climate change and progress toward cleaner economies, the trajectory of their CO2 emissions is not bending down fast enough.

By Maria Gallucci and Paul Horn

China and the United States, the world's two largest economies, are responsible for emitting nearly half the planet's carbon dioxide emissions. China overtook the United States in 2006 as the world's biggest CO2 polluter due to its hardening coal addiction. Per capita, however, America's carbon footprint is far bigger.

Both countries still have large fleets of coal plants and growing, but relatively tiny, renewable electricity sectors. Both have goals for lowering their global warming emissions—though none would match the scale of the climate threat. Scientists say the world's output of greenhouse gases must peak around 2016, and then decline to stop at the critical 2-degree Celsius temperature increase by century's end. Projections show both countries' emissions will peak sometime after the mid-2030s.

Using the latest figures available, InsideClimate News culled federal and international energy data to tell the story of the world's two biggest polluters.

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Link:

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/solveclimate/blog/~3/Og1JZqHO0uo/united-states-china-carbon-greenhouse-gas-emissions-renewable-energy-coal-plants-pollution-global-warming-climate

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services » InsideClimate News

Tags:

china solar energy global warming wind energy coal and carbon capture & storage

Authors:

Guest Writers

Date tagged:

02/04/2013, 13:00

Date published:

02/04/2013, 10:00