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View Full Version : China's Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes


Droid101
08-27-2007, 04:37 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/26/world/asia/26china.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Wonder when their population will revolt. Hopefully sooner rather than later.

BEIJING, Aug. 25 — No country in history has emerged as a major industrial power without creating a legacy of environmental damage that can take decades and big dollops of public wealth to undo.

But just as the speed and scale of China’s rise as an economic power have no clear parallel in history, so its pollution problem has shattered all precedents. Environmental degradation is now so severe, with such stark domestic and international repercussions, that pollution poses not only a major long-term burden on the Chinese public but also an acute political challenge to the ruling Communist Party. And it is not clear that China can rein in its own economic juggernaut.

Public health is reeling. Pollution has made cancer China’s leading cause of death, the Ministry of Health says. Ambient air pollution alone is blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. Nearly 500 million people lack access to safe drinking water.

Chinese cities often seem wrapped in a toxic gray shroud. Only 1 percent of the country’s 560 million city dwellers breathe air considered safe by the European Union. Beijing is frantically searching for a magic formula, a meteorological deus ex machina, to clear its skies for the 2008 Olympics.

Environmental woes that might be considered catastrophic in some countries can seem commonplace in China: industrial cities where people rarely see the sun; children killed or sickened by lead poisoning or other types of local pollution; a coastline so swamped by algal red tides that large sections of the ocean no longer sustain marine life.

China is choking on its own success. The economy is on a historic run, posting a succession of double-digit growth rates. But the growth derives, now more than at any time in the recent past, from a staggering expansion of heavy industry and urbanization that requires colossal inputs of energy, almost all from coal, the most readily available, and dirtiest, source.

“It is a very awkward situation for the country because our greatest achievement is also our biggest burden,” says Wang Jinnan, one of China’s leading environmental researchers. “There is pressure for change, but many people refuse to accept that we need a new approach so soon.”The article is six pages long, this is just the first page. Scary times indeed.

Kwalish Kid
08-27-2007, 05:46 PM
I've seen it in Beijing, and there they've already been trying to clean that shit up.

Varaj
08-27-2007, 07:14 PM
Anybody read the National Geographic magazine issue about the environment as it stood after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The article came out just a few years after the collapse and it was amazing how bad the pollution was. They had a picture of kids lined up born with only arm. The birth defect rate was almost 100% in the town they were from, all due to pollution. Russia still has rivers that glow in the dark from all the nuclear waste dumped in them. Communism hasn't been very good for the environment.

Pigs in Space
08-27-2007, 07:27 PM
It's hard to sue the govt for damages when they tell you "It's for the greater good, so suck it up".

Northcott
08-27-2007, 08:26 PM
Just... DAMN.