A leading US environmentalist yesterday advised China to explore
renewable energy sources.
Lester Brown, 72, president of the Earth Policy Institute in
Washington DC, said: "What China clearly demonstrates to the world
now is that the Western economic mode, the fossil fuel-based,
automobile-centered, throw-away economy, is not going to work with
China."
Speaking at the Beijing launch of the Chinese version of his
2003 book "Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble" at the National Library of China, Brown
added: "China has to replace it with a renewable-energy based
system, and comprehensive recycling economy."
In the book Brown discusses a series of problems China along
with the rest of the world is facing, such as emerging water
shortages and the spectre of global grain shortages.
Brown said that if China keeps an 8 percent annual rate of
growth by 2031 the average annual income will be the same as in the
US.
By then, the nation's vast population will consume two thirds of
the world's resources, he said.
Brown suggested China should help restructure the global
economy, eradicate poverty, stabilize population growth and restore
the earth's natural systems.
"The key to restructuring the global economy is to let the
market tell the environmental truth," he said.
The US environment expert suggested adjusting the tax system to
add environmental cost to products.
"To do that, you have to calculate the environmental cost of
each product and put tax on that product," he said.
He also stressed the importance of developing renewable
energies, such as wind power.
"China lags far behind Europe and the United States in
developing wind power, despite the fact that China is a wind-rich
country," he said.
Brown also expressed his concern at the nation's booming
automobile industry.
While people in Europe and the US have begun to use bicycles and
other means of transport, interestingly, China is doing the
opposite, he said.
Brown has been heralded as "one of the world's most influential
thinkers" by the Washington Post.
He first came to Chinese readers attention with his 1995 book
"Who Will Feed China?"
(China Daily June 1, 2006)
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