CHINA EXPORTS AIR POLLUTION TO U.S. - Wind Blowing China Factory Pollution Across Pacific to U.S.
Outsourcing manufacturing to China may have resulted in less pollution
in some parts of the United States, but other regions have lesser air
quality because of U.S.-bound Chinese products, a new study in the
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds.
"Pollution
from China is having an effect in the U.S., and we need to recognize
how that is affecting both our background ozone levels and also
particulates that are reaching the West Coast," said study co-author Don
Wuebbles, professor of atmospheric science at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
In the western United States,
Chinese pollution related to exports contribute up to 12% to 24% of
daily sulfate concentrations, the study said.
Because of the
United States outsourcing manufacturing to China, the eastern United
States saw a decrease in sulfate pollution, but an increase was seen in
the western part of the nation.
Because of pollution from China,
the Los Angeles area and other U.S. regions violate national ozone
standards one extra day per year, the study said.
U.S. consumer
goods such as cellphones and televisions are often produced in China.
Although Chinese manufacturing isn't causing most of the U.S. pollution,
winds called "westerlies" can send chemicals across the Pacific Ocean
in a matter of days. Valleys and basins in western states can see
accumulations of dust, ozone and carbon.
"We know that the
efficiency of industry in China is not as it is good in the U.S.,"
Wuebbles said. Higher efficiency of U.S. manufacturing, combined with
controls on emissions and outsourcing, have made strides in reducing
U.S.-based emissions.
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Does
that mean that outsourcing manufacturing to China is bad for American
public health? The study suggests that for the United States as a whole,
there's a net benefit, because the population density in the eastern
United States is higher than in the West.
But the West still suffers.
Sulfate
concentrations went up by up to 2%, and ozone and carbon monoxide
levels saw slight increases too, in the western United States in 2006,
according to the study.
Average sulfate, carbon monoxide and
black carbon concentrations went down by 0.3% to 0.9% when looking at
population-weighted averages. But this all comes at a cost: In the
western United States and populous Chinese regions, air quality went
down.
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Researchers
found that 36% of anthropogenic sulfur dioxide, 27% of nitrogen oxides,
22% of carbon monoxide and 17% of black carbon from Chinese emissions
were linked to producing goods for export.
About 21% of
export-related emissions from China, for each of these pollutants, came
from exports that went from China to the United States.
Production of goods for export has rapidly
expanded in China, with volume growing 390% between 2000 and 2007,
although there has not been as much growth since the global financial
crisis. China has generally become a "large net exporter of
energy-intensive industrial products," the study said.
Behind
this economic growth is a rise in combustion of fossil fuels,
particularly coal, a big culprit in carbon dioxide emissions rising
worldwide.
Previous research has shown the substantial carbon
dioxide emissions that result from Chinese trade, but this study focused
on more other air pollutants. Researchers constructed a model using
data on economics and emissions.
U.N. climate change report points blame at humans
Over
the last decade, China has seen a huge increase in the use of
coal-burning power plants, Wuebbles said. Coal use for generating
electricity is a big part of why carbon dioxide emissions have nearly
doubled their rate of growth worldwide, according to a leaked report
from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
obtained by CNN.
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