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China: the real big picture

By Syd Hickman - posted Thursday, 22 August 2013


China is in the media every day, with news stories, economic data and human interest.

Anyone absorbing this information would form a big picture of rapid growth and great importance to Australia. But there is usually an undercurrent of negativity, be it authoritarian government, corruption, inefficient spending on infrastructure, the take-over of poor nations resources or the excessive buying of assets in rich nations.

Sometimes the story is very positive, such as the huge tourism boost to Australia from China, hundreds of millions of people taken out of poverty by Chinese economic success, or the cheap prices of so many goods produced in China.

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There is validity in all these perspectives but they miss much bigger and more important realities.

The Chinese Government is a long way ahead of every other government in establishing long-term goals and detailed plans to ensure those goals are achieved. Their view of the future can be seen in their actions. They are hard-line realists and our own government could learn a lot from them.

The difference in thinking between Chinese and Western governments was revealed, though it was mostly misunderstood, at the Copenhagen meeting on climate change in 2009. The West was looking for an agreement on sharing the pain of restraint for the good of the planet. The Chinese were looking for national advantage within a more complete assessment of the situation.

China was blamed, quite fairly, for ensuring that there was no strong agreement on reducing carbon emissions reached at Copenhagen. The explanations for this action by commentators generally implied a lack of concern about the environment and an unwillingness to accept any external constraints.

But before the conference, and since its failure, China has shown tremendous commitment to rolling out alternative energy systems. They now lead the world in power production by solar, nuclear, wind and hydro generators. In July this year their government committed to further expenditure of more than $US300 billion on alternative energy over five years, with the aim of reducing carbon emissions by 45% by 2020 from 2005 levels. They also have plans for regional carbon trading, to be expanded to a national system.

So the question is, why would China oppose measures it had every intention of complying with?

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The answer people such as US writer, Stephen Leeb, have come up with is simple and convincing. The Chinese actions indicate that they understand the shortages developing in carbon fuels and various important minerals. They see that there will soon be resulting constraints on the construction of all huge infrastructure projects and particularly on alternative energy systems. And they do not want the hot competition that would happen if the rich world suddenly got serious about alternative energy. They are acting while we keep talking.

In explaining their policies the Chinese always talk 'climate change' but they act 'resource depletion'. And it appears they do so because they know the western media and governments will keep dozing smugly and discuss how silly they are for acting on climate change, but might wake up if the Chinese made a serious case for action based on resource depletion.

China is clearly aiming to get its massive high-speed rail system, its nuclear power plants, hydro dams, its millions of solar panels, its huge wind farms, its airports and its new cities built as fast as possible. There are still hundreds of millions of peasants whose living standards must be raised, so construction of cities, and particularly transport and power infrastructure, must continue strongly for some years yet. But the end is in sight. Doing all that work will get much more expensive when western governments finally acknowledge the problem of resource depletion and start to do something real about it. Increased demand within supply constraints will then drive fuel and metal prices relentlessly higher.

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About the Author

Syd Hickman has worked as a school teacher, soldier, Commonwealth and State public servant, on the staff of a Premier, as chief of Staff to a Federal Minister and leader of the Opposition, and has survived for more than a decade in the small business world.

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