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Page added on July 3, 2013

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The Peak Oil Crisis: China at a Turning Point

Enviroment

This spring, I spend three weeks traveling around China and needless to say I, along with every other visitor, was impressed by the economic progress the Chinese have made in the years since the Cultural Revolution. Tens of millions have been moved from rural villages into megacities of gleaming skyscrapers, apartments, modern subways, and traffic jams of sleek, late model cars. The jams have become so bad that China’s major cities have had to implement restrictions on driving and on new car registrations.

There are of course downsides to this marvel which many believe will propel China into number one position in terms of economic and political power within a decade or two. On many days, the air in major Chinese cities is approaching lethality. Most rivers are cesspools, tap water is undrinkable, dangerous metals are building up in agricultural soil and starting to make their way into the food chain and to top it all off nobody really gets to vote for leaders or on policy. The Chinese Communist Party rules with its own version of the “social contract” – shut up about “democracy, human rights, justice,” and all that western claptrap; let us rule as we see fit; and in return we are delivering world-beating economic growth so that someday you will all be rich.

In recent months, however, there has been increasing evidence that the good times may be in danger. One simply can not grow an economy at circa 10 percent a year while ignoring the environment. Last winter air pollution in the major cities occasionally reached nearly 15 times the acceptable level. It is likely that thousands with respiratory problems died, but in China one does not talk about things like that.

The redeeming side of air pollution is that it affects rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless alike so that in recent months China’s new leadership vowed to take action against pollution after years of neglect in the name of economic growth. Remember that the US started passing clean air legislation in 1955 and got really serious with the EPA 43 years ago.

China’s pollution problem is rather simple; they now burn half the world’s coal – some 4.3 billion tons a year and 10 million barrels of oil a day. To cut pollution they have to cut coal consumption and at least put some controls on motor fuels, but to grow their economy at the targeted 7.5 percent a year, they almost certainly will have to increase coal consumption. Hydro, nuclear, and other renewables take too long to build or produce too little electricity. Something has got to go – breathable air or rapid economic growth.

This year another problem has arisen – China simply is not growing as fast as it used to. For weeks now the financial press has been wringing its hands over the lackluster numbers coming out of Beijing and their impact on the global economy. Although Beijing still claims to be growing its GDP at 7.7 percent a year, these numbers are becoming increasingly suspect. While the central government may see the merits of accurate growth statistics, those at lower levels have a great incentive to look as good as possible. Some recent numbers such as the growth in electricity production in the 1st quarter suggest that China’s economy may now be growing at a rate closer to three percent.

Part of the current problem dates back to 2008. In order to sidestep the effects of the global recession, Beijing undertook a $2.5 trillion stimulus program so that whatever was dear to local officials’ hearts was built with borrowed money no matter the economic benefit. Airports, apartments, high-speed rail lines, shopping malls sprang up everywhere. Many of these projects are seriously underutilized and are unlikely to ever pay back the money invested.

While the exact numbers are unknown, the debt acquired by China’s local governments is thought to be on the order of $2-3 trillion while much of debt has been off the books through “shadow financing.” This surge in local government spending amounted to a Chinese version of America’s sub-prime lending debacle, except this one went for public works and apartment buildings rather than single family housing.

Unregulated off-the-books “shadow banking” which has doubled in the last three years is now thought to total some $6 trillion. Government officials are concerned that it is out of control. Last month efforts to clamp down resulted in a spike in inter-bank interest rates and fears of a liquidity crisis. Whether China has the tools to work its way out of all this without a major economic slowdown has yet to be seen — but many observers are worried.

The impact on the global oil market of efforts to control pollution and unwind excessive debt could be considerable. For the last decade, Beijing has been increasing its demand for oil by circa 500,000 barrels a day or more in most years. Until recently projections had China’s demand for oil increasing at this pace indefinitely, surpassing US oil consumption by the end of the decade and buying up all the oil OPEC and other exporters can produce soon thereafter.

In last six months, however, reasons to rethink these projections are rising. Although China’s leaders want to grow their economy, the reality of un-breathable air should be enough to slow or even halt these ambitions. There are technologies out there which would allow China to produce increasing amounts of energy while maintaining air quality, but they will take years and much money to implement on the scale need to clean-up China’s air.

While chaos in the Middle East is threatening to curtail oil supplies from the region, the end of rapid growth in China is threatening to restrain a major source of increasing demand for oil. How these balance out and whether oil prices go up or down in the next few years remains to be seen.

 FCNP



8 Comments on "The Peak Oil Crisis: China at a Turning Point"

  1. BillT on Wed, 3rd Jul 2013 2:55 pm 

    Another anti-China piece from the mouthpiece of government. Wishful thinking against an enemy they cannot invade? Diversion from the depression at home?

    Perhaps they should look in the mirror and see that the world’s largest debtor, by far, is printing money by the billions to keep from imploding. That if there is one miss-step, like the sheeple waking up, the game is over and China is in a lot better position to ride out the huge financial tsunami than the West. Wait until the student loan people cannot find jobs to pay them off and still suurvive and the mass default ($1,200,000,000,000.00)will take down the Western banking system.

  2. rollin on Wed, 3rd Jul 2013 7:14 pm 

    Yes, I know people that emigrated from China because of the pollution, they didn’t want to raise their children there. Not being able to see the buildings across the street sometimes because of air pollution is a real hint.

    China is making similar mistakes that the US made during it’s development, but on a more massive scale.

    I would think that Chinese people would see that their way of life is not healthy in any way, as did Americans, but it seems that the Chinese government is not as amenable to change as ours was. They did not have Nixon either.

  3. Terrance Stuart on Wed, 3rd Jul 2013 8:30 pm 

    China is in big trouble. It lacks ready energy resources, lacks the ability to feed itself without imports, and do not drink the water anywhere there unless it is hot. It has demographic problems with an aging population and the one child policy is making families more dependent on the government. The Chinese believe their government is corrupt and are not shy about saying it. They hold a lot of US debt, which makes us business partners, they are in the unenviable position of being owed.

    The US has plenty of problems including self hating Americans, people with little ability to see cause and effect, plus a giant debt structure the result of our socialism.

    In China the government tells people pizza does not fall from heaven, and in terms of health care, if you cannot pay 100% you get no treatment there. It is a society already on the edge. I have been there and seen there is not a margin for personal stupidity there. They acknowledge that by continually mentioning Darwin. They live in a hot oil society, we live in one where the water is slowly warming to a boil.

  4. DC on Wed, 3rd Jul 2013 9:53 pm 

    The US will eventually implode when its petro-dollar hegemony finally collapses.

    China, in turn, will be ruined through and by environmental collapse. China cannot make enough salad shooters, tacky lawn ornaments and I-junks to export to the US to begin to pay for its massive environmental problems. Even the article itself hints at this. The gov’t basically authorized local authorities to build more or less whatever they wanted. I see no mention of funds being put towards remediating environmental damage. Those would have put to people to work as well-but clearly few projects along those lines were every authorized.

    End result?, ghost cities, airports with no passengers and some of the worlds largest skyscrapers with 50% vacancy rates. But hardly a dime spent on pollution controls.

    The US is pretty much the same. Despite this articles claim the US ‘cleaned up its act 50 years ago, we are now witnessing a full front assault on the EPA in the US, which at this point, often protects and shield polluters just as bad as anything in China. The only difference with China is one of scale and speed. The US corporations are in effect, trying to roll back the weak protections in the US in order to emulate China. A full blown effort to turn back the clock to a kind of coal-age smokestack economy, except this time, global in scale.

  5. BillT on Thu, 4th Jul 2013 12:24 am 

    I would remind everyone that China is the US of 50 years ago. When they stop making junk for the world, their air will clear and their streams lose much of the pollution. I am old enough to remember when you could not see above the 7th floor in Pittsburgh,and seeing raw sewage floating in the rivers.

  6. rollin on Thu, 4th Jul 2013 1:33 am 

    Amen, BillT, me too. Every city had a grey dome over it and the horizon had a brown ring around it. The East River was black. St. Louis brought tears to my eyes, the air pollution made them burn.
    Rivers ran colors depending on the dye the mills were using that day.

  7. Ed on Thu, 4th Jul 2013 10:18 am 

    China, US, … following the standard run as modeled in the classic ‘limits to growth’ book. We know how it ends. Tragic but entertaining (at least for me).

  8. Frank Kling on Fri, 5th Jul 2013 1:16 pm 

    Wishful thinking, Bill T. To equate China with the US is a false equivalency. The environmental problems are too monumental to comprehend. Desertification is destroying millions of acres of once productive farmland every year while Chinese aquifers are being emptied by the tens of feet of every year.
    The uS emerged during a period of energy abundance nor did the US have to contend with 1 billion four hundred million citizens most of whom continue to live in poverty.
    The key to keeping the US preeminent is our ability to create new technology and innovation.

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