Car plague - Jan 23
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
"I've been to Sichuan, Shandong and Jilin provinces, and I plan to spend Chinese New Year driving to Yunnan," said Zhu Chao, a Web site engineer and K-One club member who often takes long drives during his holidays. "I really like what the car brings to my life -- convenience, freedom, flexibility, a quick rhythm. I can't imagine life without it." ...Most people in this country of 1.3 billion still do not own a car. For example, in Beijing, a city of 16 million people, there are just slightly more than 3 million cars. But car ownership in China has grown by 300 percent in just six years. The capital's roads and intersections were not designed to cope with such an influx. The air is thick with pollutants, many from the emissions of the more than 1,000 cars being added to the streets each day.
That might be about to change, and the car market go through the roof, if reports from the UK media are to be believed. The Daily Telegraph says Saudi Arabia is to lift its ban on women drivers in an attempt to stem a rising suffragette-style movement in the deeply conservative state. Government officials have confirmed the landmark decision and plan to issue a decree by the end of the year. The move is designed to forestall campaigns for greater freedom by women, says the paper, which have recently included protesters driving cars through the Islamic state in defiance of a threat of detention and loss of livelihoods. The driving ban dates back to the establishment of the state in 1932. As expected, the motor industry is rubbing its hands. "If women can drive, then the car industry will be booming," said a sales executive with a major car manufacturer.
Meanwhile, car sales in the developed countries are plummeting. In 2007, U.S. car sales dropped to their lowest point in a decade, and analysts are expecting 2008 to mark the third straight year of shrinkage in domestic car sales. And according to Maryann Keller, an auto consultant, `It’s not just the United States that’s going down, it’s western Europe. Everybody is aiming at Russia, China and India.” As a result of slumping sales, struggling Western car companies are, according to the New York Times, “looking to see where the cost-obsessed ethos of the developing world can help their bottom line.” On the same day Tata unveiled its new Nano, Ford Motors announced plans to more than double its investment in India-raising its total stake to $875 million-to make the country a regional hub for small-car manufacturing, compete for the fast-growing local low-cost market, and to build a new engine manufacturing plant. Such plans have are keeping some in the environmental community awake at night. Transportation has the fastest growing carbon emissions of any economic sector and automobiles are largely to blame with more than 600 million passenger vehicles now cruising the world’s roads. The prospect of millions of new cars spells an exponential rise in carbon emissions as well as other kinds of pollutants. The top U.N. climate scientist and chair of the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Rajendra Pachauri, recently told the Washington Post that he is already “having nightmares” about precisely this scenario. It’s not just the number of new cars rolling out of manufacturing plants, companies like Tata cut costs by avoiding the use of expensive emissions-cutting and modern safety technologies/
In 1992, 68 per cent of Canadians aged 18 and over drove everywhere, according to a new report from Statistics Canada. By 1998, that proportion was 70 per cent. n 2005, the most recent year for which numbers are available, 74 per cent of Canadians were full-time drivers. Biking and walking rates, meanwhile, declined to 19 per cent in 2005 from 26 per cent in 1992. It seems hypocritical, but Dale Marshall, climate change policy analyst for the David Suzuki Foundation, says many have no choice. Canadian cities are sprawling almost unchecked, he says, and the search for affordable housing has pushed many people to the outskirts where a car may be the only realistic option.
This year’s overreaching theme had to be green. Automakers desperately tried to make converts by rolling out a woozy parade of concept cars designed to run on renewable fuels like ethanol as well as less plausible dream machines that consume hydrogen or recharge from a wall plug. There is some definite progress, but the steps are generally smaller than automakers were preaching at the show or the breathless headlines would have you believe. As you would expect, General Motors and Toyota, the two biggest auto companies on the planet, tub-thumped the loudest. G.M. staged three press conferences along with a pre-auto show party, G.M. Style, to bolster its green message. |
news by category
- Resources
- Regions
- Related Issues
featured content
- Authors
- Dan Allen
- Cecile Andrews
- Sharon Astyk
- Megan Quinn Bachman
- Albert Bates
- Ugo Bardi
- Dan Bednarz
- Rebecca Burgess
- Sarah Byrnes
- Molly Scott Cato
- Kurt Cobb
- Dave Cohen
- Erik Curren
- Lindsay Curren
- Andrew Curry
- Herman Daly
- Kris De Decker
- Rob Dietz
- Charlotte Du Cann
- Rahul Goswami
- John Michael Greer
- Nate Hagens
- Richard Heinberg
- Øyvind Holmstad
- Rob Hopkins
- Robert Jensen
- Brian Kaller
- Frank Kaminski
- Paul Kingsnorth
- Amanda Kovattana
- Ellen LaConte
- Gene Logsdon
- Kathy McMahon
- Asher Miller
- Bill McKibben
- Rick Munroe
- Tom Murphy
- Andrew Nikiforuk
- Dmitry Orlov
- Christine Patton
- Damien Perrotin
- Dave Pollard
- Joanne Poyourow
- Barath Raghavan
- Wayne Roberts
- Stuart Staniford
- John Thackara
- Gail Tverberg
- Tom Whipple
- More authors...
- Publishers
- ASPO-USA
- Civil Eats
- Climate Progress
- Culture Change
- Energy Bulletin
- Fernand Braudel Center
- Feasta
- Nourishing the Planet
- Oil Depletion Analysis Centre
- On the Commons
- OpenDemocracy
- OpenEconomy
- Post Carbon Institute
- Shareable
- Solutions
- The Daly News
- The Oil Drum
- Shareable
- TomDispatch.com
- Transition Milwaukee
- Transition Voice
- Yale Environment 360
- Yes! Magazine
- Media Publishers
- Reviews
- Web chats
The Post Carbon Reader
A must-read collection by some of the world’s most provocative thinkers on the key issues shaping our new century. Buy now and receive a 20% discount.







