US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
    Business / Industries

    Greenhouse gases predicted to peak earlier than pledged

    (Agencies) Updated: 2015-06-09 11:28

    China's output of greenhouse gases is set to start falling five years earlier than the largest emitter has pledged, according to a study by UK academics that indicates an increased chance of global warming staying at safe levels.

    The forecast of a peak in 2025 in a paper published on Monday by former World Bank chief economist Nicholas Stern suggests China is acting faster than promised to shift to clean energy from fossil fuels. President Xi Jinping last year pledged that his country's emissions would peak by 2030.

    "China's international commitment to peak carbon dioxide emissions around 2030 should be seen as a conservative upper limit from a government that prefers to under-promise and over-deliver," Stern, now a professor at the London School of Economics, and his co-author, Fergus Green, wrote in the paper.

    The nation's progress in reducing emissions is crucial to the success of global efforts to rein in climate change, because it spews about a quarter of all heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere. Envoys from more than 190 nations aim to broker the first global deal to cut carbon emissions that's binding for all countries at a United Nations meeting in Paris in December.

    The goal for the new agreement will be to contain the rise in temperatures since the industrial revolution to at most 2 degrees Celsius. That is a target that even Christiana Figueres, the UN diplomat spearheading talks, has said may be beyond the capability of the Paris conference.

    The China forecast "could hold open the possibility that global greenhouse gas emissions could be brought onto a pathway consistent with the international goal", Stern and Green wrote.

    Chinese emissions are likely to rise to the equivalent of 12.5 billion to 14 billion tons of carbon dioxide before annual output begins to decline, according to the paper. The country spewed about 10.5 billion tons in 2011, the most recent data from the World Resources Institute indicates.

    Hot Topics

    Editor's Picks
    ...
    久久亚洲AV无码精品色午夜 | 久久亚洲精品中文字幕三区| xx中文字幕乱偷avxx| 免费无码VA一区二区三区| 亚洲天堂中文字幕| 人妻无码久久精品| 无码区国产区在线播放| 最近最新中文字幕完整版| 蜜臀AV无码国产精品色午夜麻豆| 无码国产精品一区二区免费虚拟VR| 精选观看中文字幕高清无码| 亚洲日韩精品无码一区二区三区| 中文字幕无码免费久久| 国产成人无码a区在线视频 | 久久亚洲精品中文字幕三区| 国模无码一区二区三区不卡| 亚洲爆乳精品无码一区二区三区 | av无码专区| 亚洲AV综合色区无码一区爱AV | 好硬~好爽~别进去~动态图, 69式真人无码视频免| 国产精品综合专区中文字幕免费播放 | 亚洲看片无码在线视频| √天堂中文www官网| 亚洲精品97久久中文字幕无码| 日韩AV片无码一区二区不卡电影| 久久亚洲AV成人无码| 天堂а√中文在线| 国产成人三级经典中文| 中文字幕7777| 一区二区三区无码高清| 亚洲成a人无码av波多野按摩 | 伊人久久综合无码成人网| 中文字幕国产在线| 亚洲AV无码资源在线观看| 免费无遮挡无码视频在线观看| AV无码免费永久在线观看| 国产热の有码热の无码视频| 久久久久成人精品无码中文字幕| 四虎成人精品无码| 久久亚洲AV成人无码国产 | 久久亚洲精品成人av无码网站|