-
Thousands rally for EU on Georgia independence day
-
Trump builds giant stage at White House for birthday cage fight
-
Even moderately hot days raise risk of koala deaths: study
-
North Korea tests new multi-purpose missile launch system: KCNA
-
New strikes threaten ceasefires in Iran, Lebanon
-
Sinner, Sabalenka cruise in French Open first round
-
Hitting the high notes: Pilot Daniel Harding named as chief of LA Philharmonic
-
Samsung workers wrap up vote on massive AI bonus deal
-
Ruthless Sinner powers into French Open second round
-
Vance hails Pope Leo's AI encyclical as 'profound'
-
Peace deal hopes boost Wall Street stocks despite latest US strikes
-
Record temps as spring heatwave bakes Europe
-
Reyna included in US World Cup squad, four years after Doha drama
-
Patidar stars as Bengaluru hammer Gujarat to reach IPL final
-
Europa League demotion fueling Palace's European run, says Glasner
-
Why is Europe the world's fastest warming continent?
-
Kalinskaya dispatches last year's French Open home hero Boisson
-
Two-time Ballon d'Or winner Putellas leaving Barca women's team
-
Medical check up went 'perfectly' says Trump, nearly 80
-
French Open: What level of heat would stop play?
-
King Charles visits grey squirrel contraceptive project
-
Record temps as spring heat wave bakes Europe
-
Oil back at $100 as US strikes douse Iran war hopes
-
As IPO nears, arms maker KNDS reports booming profits
-
Vingegaard climbs to his fourth stage win to tighten grip on Giro
-
Trump, days from 80th birthday, has annual medical exam
-
Senegal parliament elects ousted PM as speaker in challenge to president
-
BP ousts chairman over 'serious' governance concerns
-
Louvre heist to be turned into film
-
Champion Gauff cruises into French Open second round
-
Fish-eating cormorant lands in EU's crosshairs
-
At sweltering Roland Garros fans and players try to stay cool
-
Sabalenka thrives in French Open heat, Sinner waits in wings
-
Norway crown prince 'worried' about wife's health
-
Trump flexes muscle in Texas Senate runoff
-
US, Armenia pledge to move forward on corridor during Rubio visit
-
Iran accuses US of breaking truce after new strikes
-
Video games turn to classic films to woo middle-aged millenials
-
Trump has annual medical exam, days before turning 80
-
Paris school aide tried for alleged sexual assault of preschoolers
-
Pilgrims pray on Mount Arafat as hajj reaches peak
-
Rubio opens talks in Armenia on US cooperation
-
Senegal parliament elects ousted PM as speaker
-
Saudi Arabia turns to drones to shield pilgrims from extreme heat
-
Appeals court to review UK judge sparing teen rapists jail
-
Dominant Sabalenka moves into Roland Garros second round
-
Mango founder's son says accusation he killed his father 'unfounded'
-
'Curious' dolphin charms French town but experts concerned
-
MEXC Deploys 1,000 BTC to Strategic Reserves in March–April Security Report
-
Four dead after train hits school bus in Belgium
China backpedals on climate promises as economy slows
When China's President Xi Jinping issued his traditional Lunar New Year wishes from the country's coal heartland in January, the subtext was clear: Beijing is not ready to kick its coal addiction, despite promises to slash emissions.
The ink had barely dried on the hard-fought deal struck at last year's United Nations climate conference in Glasgow when Beijing's backslide on pledges began.
The country's central economic planner has watered down a roadmap to slash emissions, greenlighted giant coal-fired power plants, and told mines to produce "as much coal as possible" after power shortages paralysed swathes of the economy last year.
Environmentalists are concerned this would mean China would continue to pollute beyond the 2030 deadline by which it has promised to have reached peak emissions.
Xi's trip to mining towns in Shanxi –- China's biggest coal producing province -- saw him making crispy noodle snacks with families "recently lifted out of poverty".
"We are not pursuing carbon neutrality because others are forcing us, it's something we must do. But it can't be rushed," he said later, while inspecting a thermal power plant.
"We can't delay action, but we must find the right rhythm."
Days earlier, Xi told Communist Party officials in Beijing that low-carbon goals should not come at the expense of "normal life" -- a major change in rhetoric from his 2020 announcement at a UN assembly that China would be carbon neutral by 2060.
- Dependent on coal -
The Glasgow pact encourages countries to slash their emissions targets, with the aim of limiting warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius (36 degrees Fahrenheit) ideally to 1.5 degrees.
Experts have warned that global emissions must be halved within a decade to have a chance of achieving that goal.
A report issued by the UN's climate science advisors on Monday said that warming beyond 1.5C would wreak permanent damage to the planet and that nearly half the world's population is already "highly vulnerable" to the accelerating impacts of climate change.
"The world's biggest polluters are guilty of arson of our only home," UN chief Antonio Guterres said in response to this most compelling scientific overview of climate change impacts to date.
China generates an estimated 29 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions -- double the US share and three times that of the European Union.
Environmentalists had hoped that post-Glasgow, Beijing might announce a maximum carbon cap for the whole country but Li Shuo, a campaigner for Greenpeace China, told AFP that is now "off the table".
Policymakers in Beijing have long walked a tightrope balancing climate objectives with domestic growth.
Beijing has pledged to curb coal consumption after 2025 -- but last year, half of China's economy was fuelled by it.
Now as growth slows, authorities are resorting to an old formula of propping up smokestack industries to juice the economy.
In late 2021 China began construction on 33 gigawatts of coal-fired power plants -- the most since 2016 -- that will emit as much carbon dioxide annually as Florida, according to data from Global Energy Monitor.
Even more new plants are being built in the first few months of 2022 as well, all of which can operate for 40 years on average.
- 'Ambition in jeopardy' -
During the Glasgow talks the Chinese delegation -- like many others -- promised a detailed roadmap to peak emissions for different industries and regions over the next decade.
Existing guidelines issued just before the talks only include vague targets for increasing energy efficiency and say renewables will supply a quarter of China's electricity by 2030.
They have not yet been updated.
This "suggests that the politics are tough, ambition is in jeopardy, and the regulators are reserving as much wiggle room (to pollute) as possible for the next few years," Greenpeace's Li said.
Earlier last month, Beijing pushed back the deadline for slashing emissions from the steel sector -- China's biggest carbon emitter -- five years to 2030.
"Steel and cement need to peak earlier than the country as a whole to ensure China's targets are on track," said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
Meanwhile, China's investments in overseas oil and gas projects tripled to $10.9 billion last year, according to a Fudan University report in January.
- Renewable bottlenecks -
Another of China's key pledges -- to increase wind and solar capacity to three times the current level over the next decade -- has been blown off-course as well by supply chain disruptions and soaring raw material costs.
The price of polysilicon, used to make solar panels, jumped 174 percent in December from the previous year.
Analysts fear more fossil fuels will be burnt to meet China's growing energy needs as the rollout of renewables slows.
"The political signals are much more cautious (than before), saying the transition will be slow, and coal would remain a mainstay of China's energy supply for a long time," said Myllyvirta.
H.E.Young--AMWN