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China’s clean technology is made of dirty metals

Decarbonisation is fueling consumption of metals, chemicals and glass, which are in turn causing a lot of greenhouse pollution as they’re manufactured. Clean-energy products are much more efficient than the alternative once they’re being used — but producing them is causing a spike in carbon emissions

February 07, 2024 / 10:32 IST
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Decarbonisation is fueling consumption of metals, chemicals and glass, which are in turn causing a lot of greenhouse pollution.

Two months ago, the world’s governments signed on to an ambitious program for decarbonisation. The capacity of renewable power worldwide would triple by 2030, while energy efficiency would improve at double existing rates, delegates to the COP28 climate meeting in Dubai agreed.

Right now, those two objectives are pushing in opposite directions.

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To see why, look at China. The country is likely to build the lion’s share of new renewable capacity. At the same time, it’s responsible for about a third of the world’s emissions — and its efficiency is worsening. That’s almost certainly connected to the vast volumes of materials all those solar panels, electric vehicles, and wind turbines are using up, and the coal that’s getting burned in producing them.

Electricity consumption rose at a blistering 6.7 percent pace last year, the China Electricity Council, a trade group, said last week. If you still think China isn’t using energy in the lavish manner of rich countries, think again. In 2023, power demand came to about 6.54 megawatt-hours per person — about a third more than the average Italian or UK resident. This year, China’s per-capita electricity use is likely to overtake France and Germany.