Posted by: zanshin, 2007-08-25 11:24

Story

As China Roars, Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes

JOSEPH KAHN and JIM YARDLEY, 2007-08-26 (Sunday), NY Times
BEIJING, Aug. 25 — No country in history has emerged as a major industrial power without creating a legacy of environmental damage that can take decades and big dollops of public wealth to undo.

But just as the speed and scale of China’s rise as an economic power have no clear parallel in history, so its pollution problem has shattered all precedents. Environmental degradation is now so severe, with such stark domestic and international repercussions, that pollution poses not only a major long-term burden on the Chinese public but also an acute political challenge to the ruling Communist Party. And it is not clear that China can rein in its own economic juggernaut.

Public health is reeling. Pollution has made cancer China’s leading cause of death, the Ministry of Health says. Ambient air pollution alone is blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. Nearly 500 million people lack access to safe drinking water.

Chinese cities often seem wrapped in a toxic gray shroud. Only 1 percent of the country’s 560 million city dwellers breathe air considered safe by the European Union. Beijing is frantically searching for a magic formula, a meteorological deus ex machina, to clear its skies for the 2008 Olympics.

Environmental woes that might be considered catastrophic in some countries can seem commonplace in China: industrial cities where people rarely see the sun; children killed or sickened by lead poisoning or other types of local pollution; a coastline so swamped by algal red tides that large sections of the ocean no longer sustain marine life.

China is choking on its own success. The economy is on a historic run, posting a succession of double-digit growth rates. But the growth derives, now more than at any time in the recent past, from a staggering expansion of heavy industry and urbanization that requires colossal inputs of energy, almost all from coal, the most readily available, and dirtiest, source.

“It is a very awkward situation for the country because our greatest achievement is also our biggest burden,” says Wang Jinnan, one of China’s leading environmental researchers. “There is pressure for change, but many people refuse to accept that we need a new approach so soon.”

China’s problem has become the world’s problem. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides spewed by China’s coal-fired power plants fall as acid rain on Seoul, South Korea, and Tokyo. Much of the particulate pollution over Los Angeles originates in China, according to the Journal of Geophysical Research.

More pressing still, China has entered the most robust stage of its industrial revolution, even as much of the outside world has become preoccupied with global warming.

Experts once thought China might overtake the United States as the world’s leading producer of greenhouse gases by 2010, possibly later. Now, the International Energy Agency has said China could become the emissions leader by the end of this year, and the Netherlands Environment Assessment Agency said China had already passed that level.

For the Communist Party, the political calculus is daunting. Reining in economic growth to alleviate pollution may seem logical, but the country’s authoritarian system is addicted to fast growth. Delivering prosperity placates the public, provides spoils for well-connected officials and forestalls demands for political change. A major slowdown could incite social unrest, alienate business interests and threaten the party’s rule.

But pollution poses its own threat. Officials blame fetid air and water for thousands of episodes of social unrest. Health care costs have climbed sharply. Severe water shortages could turn more farmland into desert. And the unconstrained expansion of energy-intensive industries creates greater dependence on imported oil and dirty coal, meaning that environmental problems get harder and more expensive to address the longer they are unresolved.

China’s leaders recognize that they must change course. They are vowing to overhaul the growth-first philosophy of the Deng Xiaoping era and embrace a new model that allows for steady growth while protecting the environment. In his equivalent of a State of the Union address this year, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao made 48 references to “environment,” “pollution” or “environmental protection.”

The government has numerical targets for reducing emissions and conserving energy. Export subsidies for polluting industries have been phased out. Different campaigns have been started to close illegal coal mines and shutter some heavily polluting factories. Major initiatives are under way to develop clean energy sources like solar and wind power. And environmental regulation in Beijing, Shanghai and other leading cities has been tightened ahead of the 2008 Olympics.

Yet most of the government’s targets for energy efficiency, as well as improving air and water quality, have gone unmet. And there are ample signs that the leadership is either unwilling or unable to make fundamental changes.

Land, water, electricity, oil and bank loans remain relatively inexpensive, even for heavy polluters. Beijing has declined to use the kind of tax policies and market-oriented incentives for conservation that have worked well in Japan and many European countries.

Provincial officials, who enjoy substantial autonomy, often ignore environmental edicts, helping to reopen mines or factories closed by central authorities. Over all, enforcement is often tinged with corruption. This spring, officials in Yunnan Province in southern China beautified Laoshou Mountain, which had been used as a quarry, by spraying green paint over acres of rock.

President Hu Jintao’s most ambitious attempt to change the culture of fast-growth collapsed this year. The project, known as “Green G.D.P.,” was an effort to create an environmental yardstick for evaluating the performance of every official in China. It recalculated gross domestic product, or G.D.P., to reflect the cost of pollution.

But the early results were so sobering — in some provinces the pollution-adjusted growth rates were reduced almost to zero — that the project was banished to China’s ivory tower this spring and stripped of official influence.

Chinese leaders argue that the outside world is a partner in degrading the country’s environment. Chinese manufacturers that dump waste into rivers or pump smoke into the sky make the cheap products that fill stores in the United States and Europe. Often, these manufacturers subcontract for foreign companies — or are owned by them. In fact, foreign investment continues to rise as multinational corporations build more factories in China. Beijing also insists that it will accept no mandatory limits on its carbon dioxide emissions, which would almost certainly reduce its industrial growth. It argues that rich countries caused global warming and should find a way to solve it without impinging on China’s development.

Indeed, Britain, the United States and Japan polluted their way to prosperity and worried about environmental damage only after their economies matured and their urban middle classes demanded blue skies and safe drinking water.

But China is more like a teenage smoker with emphysema. The costs of pollution have mounted well before it is ready to curtail economic development. But the price of business as usual — including the predicted effects of global warming on China itself — strikes many of its own experts and some senior officials as intolerably high.

“Typically, industrial countries deal with green problems when they are rich,” said Ren Yong, a climate expert at the Center for Environment and Economy in Beijing. “We have to deal with them while we are still poor. There is no model for us to follow.”

In the face of past challenges, the Communist Party has usually responded with sweeping edicts from Beijing. Some environmentalists say they hope the top leadership has now made pollution control such a high priority that lower level officials will have no choice but to go along, just as Deng Xiaoping once forced China’s sluggish bureaucracy to fixate on growth.

But the environment may end up posing a different political challenge. A command-and-control political culture accustomed to issuing thundering directives is now under pressure, even from people in the ruling party, to submit to oversight from the public, for which pollution has become a daily — and increasingly deadly — reality.

Perpetual Haze

During the three decades since Deng set China on a course toward market-style growth, rapid industrialization and urbanization have lifted hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty and made the country the world’s largest producer of consumer goods. But there is little question that growth came at the expense of the country’s air, land and water, much of it already degraded by decades of Stalinist economic planning that emphasized the development of heavy industries in urban areas.

For air quality, a major culprit is coal, on which China relies for about two-thirds of its energy needs. It has abundant supplies of coal and already burns more of it than the United States, Europe and Japan combined. But even many of its newest coal-fired power plants and industrial furnaces operate inefficiently and use pollution controls considered inadequate in the West.

Expanding car ownership, heavy traffic and low-grade gasoline have made autos the leading source of air pollution in major Chinese cities. Only 1 percent of China’s urban population of 560 million now breathes air considered safe by the European Union, according to a World Bank study of Chinese pollution published this year. One major pollutant contributing to China’s bad air is particulate matter, which includes concentrations of fine dust, soot and aerosol particles less than 10 microns in diameter (known as PM 10).

The level of such particulates is measured in micrograms per cubic meter of air. The European Union stipulates that any reading above 40 micrograms is unsafe. The United States allows 50. In 2006, Beijing’s average PM 10 level was 141, according to the Chinese National Bureau of Statistics. Only Cairo, among world capitals, had worse air quality as measured by particulates, according to the World Bank.

Emissions of sulfur dioxide from coal and fuel oil, which can cause respiratory and cardiovascular diseases as well as acid rain, are increasing even faster than China’s economic growth. In 2005, China became the leading source of sulfur dioxide pollution globally, the State Environmental Protection Administration, or SEPA, reported last year.

Other major air pollutants, including ozone, an important component of smog, and smaller particulate matter, called PM 2.5, emitted when gasoline is burned, are not widely monitored in China. Medical experts in China and in the West have argued that PM 2.5 causes more chronic diseases of the lung and heart than the more widely watched PM 10.

Perhaps an even more acute challenge is water. China has only one-fifth as much water per capita as the United States. But while southern China is relatively wet, the north, home to about half of China’s population, is an immense, parched region that now threatens to become the world’s biggest desert.

Farmers in the north once used shovels to dig their wells. Now, many aquifers have been so depleted that some wells in Beijing and Hebei must extend more than half a mile before they reach fresh water. Industry and agriculture use nearly all of the flow of the Yellow River, before it reaches the Bohai Sea.

In response, Chinese leaders have undertaken one of the most ambitious engineering projects in world history, a $60 billion network of canals, rivers and lakes to transport water from the flood-prone Yangtze River to the silt-choked Yellow River. But that effort, if successful, will still leave the north chronically thirsty.

This scarcity has not yet created a culture of conservation. Water remains inexpensive by global standards, and Chinese industry uses 4 to 10 times more water per unit of production than the average in industrialized nations, according to the World Bank.

In many parts of China, factories and farms dump waste into surface water with few repercussions. China’s environmental monitors say that one-third of all river water, and vast sections of China’s great lakes, the Tai, Chao and Dianchi, have water rated Grade V, the most degraded level, rendering it unfit for industrial or agricultural use.

Grim Statistics

The toll this pollution has taken on human health remains a delicate topic in China. The leadership has banned publication of data on the subject for fear of inciting social unrest, said scholars involved in the research. But the results of some research provide alarming evidence that the environment has become one of the biggest causes of death.

An internal, unpublicized report by the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning in 2003 estimated that 300,000 people die each year from ambient air pollution, mostly of heart disease and lung cancer. An additional 110,000 deaths could be attributed to indoor air pollution caused by poorly ventilated coal and wood stoves or toxic fumes from shoddy construction materials, said a person involved in that study.

Another report, prepared in 2005 by Chinese environmental experts, estimated that annual premature deaths attributable to outdoor air pollution were likely to reach 380,000 in 2010 and 550,000 in 2020.

This spring, a World Bank study done with SEPA, the national environmental agency, concluded that outdoor air pollution was already causing 350,000 to 400,000 premature deaths a year. Indoor pollution contributed to the deaths of an additional 300,000 people, while 60,000 died from diarrhea, bladder and stomach cancer and other diseases that can be caused by water-borne pollution.

China’s environmental agency insisted that the health statistics be removed from the published version of the report, citing the possible impact on “social stability,” World Bank officials said.

But other international organizations with access to Chinese data have published similar results. For example, the World Health Organization found that China suffered more deaths from water-related pollutants and fewer from bad air, but agreed with the World Bank that the total death toll had reached 750,000 a year. In comparison, 4,700 people died last year in China’s notoriously unsafe mines, and 89,000 people were killed in road accidents, the highest number of automobile-related deaths in the world. The Ministry of Health estimates that cigarette smoking takes a million Chinese lives each year.

Studies of Chinese environmental health mostly use statistical models developed in the United States and Europe and apply them to China, which has done little long-term research on the matter domestically. The results are more like plausible suppositions than conclusive findings.

But Chinese experts say that, if anything, the Western models probably understate the problems.

“China’s pollution is worse, the density of its population is greater and people do not protect themselves as well,” said Jin Yinlong, the director general of the Institute for Environmental Health and Related Product Safety in Beijing. “So the studies are not definitive. My assumption is that they will turn out to be conservative.”

Growth Run Amok

As gloomy as China’s pollution picture looks today, it is set to get significantly worse, because China has come to rely mainly on energy-intensive heavy industry and urbanization to fuel economic growth. In 2000, a team of economists and energy specialists at the Development Research Center, part of the State Council, set out to gauge how much energy China would need over the ensuing 20 years to achieve the leadership’s goal of quadrupling the size of the economy.

They based their projections on China’s experience during the first 20 years of economic reform, from 1980 to 2000. In that period, China relied mainly on light industry and small-scale private enterprise to spur growth. It made big improvements in energy efficiency even as the economy expanded rapidly. Gross domestic product quadrupled, while energy use only doubled.

The team projected that such efficiency gains would probably continue. But the experts also offered what they called a worst-case situation in which the most energy-hungry parts of the economy grew faster and efficiency gains fell short.

That worst-case situation now looks wildly optimistic. Last year, China burned the energy equivalent of 2.7 billion tons of coal, three-quarters of what the experts had said would be the maximum required in 2020. To put it another way, China now seems likely to need as much energy in 2010 as it thought it would need in 2020 under the most pessimistic assumptions.

“No one really knew what was driving the economy, which is why the predictions were so wrong,” said Yang Fuqiang, a former Chinese energy planner who is now the chief China representative of the Energy Foundation, an American group that supports energy-related research. “What I fear is that the trend is now basically irreversible.”

The ravenous appetite for fossil fuels traces partly to an economic stimulus program in 1997. The leadership, worried that China’s economy would fall into a steep recession as its East Asian neighbors had, provided generous state financing and tax incentives to support industrialization on a grand scale.

It worked well, possibly too well. In 1996, China and the United States each accounted for 13 percent of global steel production. By 2005, the United States share had dropped to 8 percent, while China’s share had risen to 35 percent, according to a study by Daniel H. Rosen and Trevor Houser of China Strategic Advisory, a group that analyzes the Chinese economy.

Similarly, China now makes half of the world’s cement and flat glass, and about a third of its aluminum. In 2006, China overtook Japan as the second-largest producer of cars and trucks after the United States.

Its energy needs are compounded because even some of its newest heavy industry plants do not operate as efficiently, or control pollution as effectively, as factories in other parts of the world, a recent World Bank report said.

Chinese steel makers, on average, use one-fifth more energy per ton than the international average. Cement manufacturers need 45 percent more power, and ethylene producers need 70 percent more than producers elsewhere, the World Bank says.

China’s aluminum industry alone consumes as much energy as the country’s commercial sector — all the hotels, restaurants, banks and shopping malls combined, Mr. Rosen and Mr. Houser reported.

Moreover, the boom is not limited to heavy industry. Each year for the past few years, China has built about 7.5 billion square feet of commercial and residential space, more than the combined floor space of all the malls and strip malls in the United States, according to data collected by the United States Energy Information Administration.

Chinese buildings rarely have thermal insulation. They require, on average, twice as much energy to heat and cool as those in similar climates in the United States and Europe, according to the World Bank. A vast majority of new buildings — 95 percent, the bank says — do not meet China’s own codes for energy efficiency.

All these new buildings require China to build power plants, which it has been doing prodigiously. In 2005 alone, China added 66 gigawatts of electricity to its power grid, about as much power as Britain generates in a year. Last year, it added an additional 102 gigawatts, as much as France.

That increase has come almost entirely from small- and medium-size coal-fired power plants that were built quickly and inexpensively. Only a few of them use modern, combined-cycle turbines, which increase efficiency, said Noureddine Berrah, an energy expert at the World Bank. He said Beijing had so far declined to use the most advanced type of combined-cycle turbines despite having completed a successful pilot project nearly a decade ago.

While over the long term, combined-cycle plants save money and reduce pollution, Mr. Berrah said, they cost more and take longer to build. For that reason, he said, central and provincial government officials prefer older technology.

“China is making decisions today that will affect its energy use for the next 30 or 40 years,” he said. “Unfortunately, in some parts of the government the thinking is much more shortsighted.”

The Politics of Pollution

Since Hu Jintao became the Communist Party chief in 2002 and Wen Jiabao became prime minister the next spring, China’s leadership has struck consistent themes. The economy must grow at a more sustainable, less bubbly pace. Environmental abuse has reached intolerable levels. Officials who ignore these principles will be called to account.

Five years later, it seems clear that these senior leaders are either too timid to enforce their orders, or the fast-growth political culture they preside over is too entrenched to heed them.

In the second quarter of this year, the economy expanded at a neck-snapping pace of 11.9 percent, its fastest in a decade. State-driven investment projects, state-backed heavy industry and a thriving export sector led the way. China burned 18 percent more coal than it did the year before.

China’s authoritarian system has repeatedly proved its ability to suppress political threats to Communist Party rule. But its failure to realize its avowed goals of balancing economic growth and environmental protection is a sign that the country’s environmental problems are at least partly systemic, many experts and some government officials say. China cannot go green, in other words, without political change.

In their efforts to free China of its socialist shackles in the 1980s and early 90s, Deng and his supporters gave lower-level officials the leeway, and the obligation, to increase economic growth.

Local party bosses gained broad powers over state bank lending, taxes, regulation and land use. In return, the party leadership graded them, first and foremost, on how much they expanded the economy in their domains.

To judge by its original goals — stimulating the economy, creating jobs and keeping the Communist Party in power — the system Deng put in place has few equals. But his approach eroded Beijing’s ability to fine-tune the economy. Today, a culture of collusion between government and business has made all but the most pro-growth government policies hard to enforce.

“The main reason behind the continued deterioration of the environment is a mistaken view of what counts as political achievement,” said Pan Yue, the deputy minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration. “The crazy expansion of high-polluting, high-energy industries has spawned special interests. Protected by local governments, some businesses treat the natural resources that belong to all the people as their own private property.”

Mr. Hu has tried to change the system. In an internal address in 2004, he endorsed “comprehensive environmental and economic accounting” — otherwise known as “Green G.D.P.” He said the “pioneering endeavor” would produce a new performance test for government and party officials that better reflected the leadership’s environmental priorities.

The Green G.D.P. team sought to calculate the yearly damage to the environment and human health in each province. Their first report, released last year, estimated that pollution in 2004 cost just over 3 percent of the gross domestic product, meaning that the pollution-adjusted growth rate that year would drop to about 7 percent from 10 percent. Officials said at the time that their formula used low estimates of environmental damage to health and did not assess the impact on China’s ecology. They would produce a more decisive formula, they said, the next year.

That did not happen. Mr. Hu’s plan died amid intense squabbling, people involved in the effort said. The Green G.D.P. group’s second report, originally scheduled for release in March, never materialized.

The official explanation was that the science behind the green index was immature. Wang Jinnan, the leading academic researcher on the Green G.D.P. team, said provincial leaders killed the project. “Officials do not like to be lined up and told how they are not meeting the leadership’s goals,” he said. “They found it difficult to accept this.”

Conflicting Pressures

Despite the demise of Green G.D.P., party leaders insist that they intend to restrain runaway energy use and emissions. The government last year mandated that the country use 20 percent less energy to achieve the same level of economic activity in 2010 compared with 2005. It also required that total emissions of mercury, sulfur dioxide and other pollutants decline by 10 percent in the same period.

The program is a domestic imperative. But it has also become China’s main response to growing international pressure to combat global warming. Chinese leaders reject mandatory emissions caps, and they say the energy efficiency plan will slow growth in carbon dioxide emissions.

Even with the heavy pressure, though, the efficiency goals have been hard to achieve. In the first full year since the targets were set, emissions increased. Energy use for every dollar of economic output fell but by much less than the 4 percent interim goal.

In a public relations sense, the party’s commitment to conservation seems steadfast. Mr. Hu shunned his usual coat and tie at a meeting of the Central Committee this summer. State news media said the temperature in the Great Hall of the People was set at a balmy 79 degrees Fahrenheit to save energy, and officials have encouraged others to set thermostats at the same level.

By other measures, though, the leadership has moved slowly to address environmental and energy concerns.

The government rarely uses market-oriented incentives to reduce pollution. Officials have rejected proposals to introduce surcharges on electricity and coal to reflect the true cost to the environment. The state still controls the price of fuel oil, including gasoline, subsidizing the cost of driving.

Energy and environmental officials have little influence in the bureaucracy. The environmental agency still has only about 200 full-time employees, compared with 18,000 at the Environmental Protection Agency in the United States.

China has no Energy Ministry. The Energy Bureau of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s central planning agency, has 100 full-time staff members. The Energy Department of the United States has 110,000 employees.

China does have an army of amateur regulators. Environmentalists expose pollution and press local government officials to enforce environmental laws. But private individuals and nongovernment organizations cannot cross the line between advocacy and political agitation without risking arrest.

At least two leading environmental organizers have been prosecuted in recent weeks, and several others have received sharp warnings to tone down their criticism of local officials. One reason the authorities have cited: the need for social stability before the 2008 Olympics, once viewed as an opportunity for China to improve the environment.

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

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2008-11-25A Secure Europe in a Better World -- European Security Strategy
2008-11-26Pipelines, politics and power -- The future of EU-Russia energy relations -- Energy geopolitics in Russia-EU relations
2008-12-06Indonesia, Iceland and the IMF - Part I
2008-11-21A Conversation with Vicente Fox Quesada
2008-11-20Defining the “Post-Soviet Space”
2008-11-20Russia And The New World Order -- The Geopolitical Project Of Pax Eurasiatica
2009-02-17Shock Wave (Anti) Warrior
2008-12-27Opening Statement before the International Military Tribunal
2006-12-03Baghdad Year Zero - Pillaging Iraq in pursuit of a neocon utopia
2006-12-06Transcript - The Nomination Hearing for Robert M. Gates
2006-12-09China Shows Signs of Shedding Modesty
2006-12-18“Bush’s Dream”
2007-02-21IPOs Shun U.S. Exchanges While Wall Street Collects Record Fees
2007-04-13India, China and the Asian axis of oil
2007-04-15Trade and American National Security: The Case Of China's WTO Accession
2007-04-15Europe's Future
2007-04-17Commission Adopts Resolutions On Combating Defamation Of Religions; Right To Development
2007-04-05"Promoting Democracy: A Progressive Foreign Policy Agenda".
2007-03-30The challenges of a global economy
2007-03-28America Plundered by the Global Elite
2007-03-14The Geopolitics of Energy: Speech given at the IP Week, 2007
2007-03-10Regime change is the reason, disarmament the excuse: An interview with Scott Ritter
2006-09-12The Nation That Fell to Earth
2006-08-30How Black Is Coal?
2006-08-24Foreign Affairs Magazine: The India Model
2006-11-07MAGHREB REGIME SCENARIOS
2006-11-18Globalization: The Long-Run Big Picture
2006-10-10Russia Seeks Greater Economic Influence in Europe
2007-07-04Grand Strategy for a Divided America
2007-07-02Zionist Plan for the Middle East
2007-06-18Israel-Lebanon conflict - timeline of events
2007-07-13Initial Benchmark Assessment Report
2007-07-08Bin Laden's Fatwa
2007-05-11Waning Chances for Stability -- Least Bad Options in a Failed, War-Torn State
2007-05-27Infiltrating Bilderberg 2005
2007-06-06Nato’s Islamists
2007-06-12Building a New Consensus on China
2007-06-13Press Conference by the President
2007-08-07In Dusty Archives, a Theory of Affluence
2007-08-29President Bush Addresses the 89th Annual National Convention of the American Legion
2008-08-25The Worldwide Threat 2004: Challenges in a Changing Global Context
2008-10-01Odious Rulers, Odious Debts
2008-10-08Oil, politics and corruption -- Bad capitalism carries its own risks
2008-04-29The Pentagon's New Map
2008-05-14Resisting the Empire
2008-06-06Cohen: The world is upside down
2008-06-06Between the Rule of Power and the Power of Rule: In Search of an Effective World Order
2008-04-05The Coming of Eurabia
2008-04-28How the rich starved the world
2008-03-26President Discusses Second Term Accomplishments and Priorities
2008-03-19The new liberal imperialism
2008-03-29Why the US is collapsing
2008-06-18The Age of Nonpolarity -- What Will Follow U.S. Dominance
2008-06-13G8 set to warn oil, food price shock endangers world economy
2008-02-26Fitzgerald: Islam for Infidels, Part Two
2008-02-08The Fallacy of Grievance-based Terrorism
2008-01-14Belgo-British Conference 2005 -- 2020 – a new horizon for Europe
2008-02-04Hydrogen Economy Enablers
2008-02-04Globalization: Stiglitz's Case
2007-12-22Iran - Nuclear Chronology - 2005
2007-12-18Turkey's EU Membership's Possible Impacts on the Middle East
2007-12-13Crisis of Faith in the Muslim World
2007-12-10Bilderberg 2007: Welcome to the Lunatic Fringe
2008-01-06Concern about 'sovereign wealth funds' spreads to Washington
2007-10-09Canada To Compete In Oil Market
2007-09-27Rice vows US is committed to tackling global warming
2007-09-24Betrayed -- The Iraqis who trusted America the most
2007-10-31Wild Weather Creates Chances for Political Progress
2007-11-01Noam Chomsky - Controlled Asset Of The New World Order
2007-11-04The Coming Economic Collapse by Dr Stephen Leeb -- Book Review
2007-11-16The Crisis Of Pakistan: A Dangerously Weak State
2007-11-29In Iraq, Water and Oil Do Mix -- Water Woes
2007-11-20The Neoconservative Moment
2009-02-02Cities or countries?
2008-11-19World Energy Outlook, 2008 Edition -- Executive summary
2008-11-21The New Geopolitics
2008-11-20The Cold Peace
2008-11-23The Politics of Money
2008-11-24Why Obama Missed Bretton Woods II
2008-12-14What Should a Billionaire Give – and What Should You?
2008-11-01The End Of Arrogance -- America Loses Its Dominant Economic Role
2008-10-15EU, U.S. pledge more than $2.36B to Kosovo
2008-11-07Confronting Global Challenges
2008-11-05"The Nation-State Is Now Transcendent, You Are Now Global Slaves And Interdependent, The Rise Of Dominion, The Death Of The Nation, Welcome To The Global Plantation"
2009-03-24China's Way Forward
2009-05-092000 Bank For International Settlements Report
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: East Asia and Pacific Overview
2009-07-17Natural Capitalism
2009-07-22Street Fighting Man
2007-08-27Iran risks attack over atomic push, French president says
2007-08-07Transcript: Bush news conference
2007-08-13Escalation by the Numbers -- What "Progress" in Iraq Really Means
2007-08-14Perils of a new Pacific arms race
2007-08-15President Delivers State of the Union Address
2007-08-18IRAQ: THE MEDIA WAR PLAN
2007-06-12Globalizing Weakness: Is Global Poverty a Threat to the Interests of States?
2007-06-06Russia Redux?
2007-06-11Should We Globalize Labor Too?
2007-06-12Rebuilding in Iraq tops 4,000 projects
2007-05-26The two 'kings' of Iran
2007-06-06G8: Issues and controversies
2007-05-31The Case for Bombing Iran
2007-06-02'High priests of globalization' in Istanbul
2007-05-15The New Demographic Balance in Europe and its Consequences
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 4 -- The Global Challenge of WMD Terrorism
2007-05-02President Bush Meets with EU Leaders -- 2007 U.S.-EU Summit
2007-05-01How Japan Imagines China and Sees Itself
2007-05-04Five events that changed the world in 2006
2007-05-09Major powers to discuss sanctions against Iran
2007-07-14A Convenient Untruth
2007-07-12Republic or empire: A National Intelligence Estimate on the United States
2007-06-18A PACKAGE DEAL FOR THE MIDDLE EAST
2007-06-26New economic tigers Brazil, Russia, India and China overtake U.S. in dominating global energy industry, new study says
2007-06-29Reply to Dalrymple
2007-07-06Gore slams U.S.-led climate pact as sham - interview
2006-09-29The international financial crisis - International Solutions - interview with hedge fund manager George Soros
2006-11-18IMF's De Rato Says U.S. Housing Slowdown Is a Risk (Update3)
2006-11-14The World Economy: A Millennial Perspective -- Introduction and Summary
2006-08-24SURF'S UP FOR ALTERNATIVE ENERGY
2006-08-24The United States of America will cease to exist on February 5th, 2006
2006-08-23The Party of Davos
2006-05-01How to Win in Iraq
2006-09-05Afghan Symbol for Change Becomes a Symbol of Failure
2006-09-23Europe Learns the Wrong Lessons
2007-03-05HOW BRITAIN'S ARMAMENTS FUEL WAR AND POVERTY
2007-03-15Mohammedanism
2007-03-17Hong Kong, Singapore economies freest
2007-03-18Between Europe And The Middle East: The Transformation Of Turkish Policy
2007-04-06Britain's Humiliation -- and Europe's
2007-04-10Six Crises in Search of an Author
2007-03-31'Europe is increasingly fading away'
2007-04-03Mbeki seeks ways to limit chaos to the north and within
2007-04-04Kazakhstan: Reducing Nuclear Dangers, Increasing Global Security
2007-04-17Human Rights Council Adopts Seven Resolutions And Two Decisions, Including Text On Darfur
2007-04-17Human Rights Council Discusses Reports On Health, Right To Food And Human Rights Defenders
2007-04-23Boris Yeltsin, Russia’s First Post-Soviet Leader, Is Dead
2007-04-12A Conversation With Vladimir Bukovsky
2007-02-19Chomsky on Iran, Iraq, and the Rest of the World
2007-02-20Timeline: N Korea nuclear stand-off
2007-01-25MIDDLE EAST - Timeline of recent developments
2007-01-30The Proliferation Security Initiative: Coming in from the Cold
2007-02-04Al Gore Is a Greenhouse Gasbag
2007-01-11RED SYMPHONY
2007-11-23Power, passion, and neoliberalism
2007-10-31Civilisation ends with a shutdown of human concern. Are we there already?
2007-10-29Balancing Exploration & Production Technology Needs
2007-10-17Map: The world's water hotspots
2007-09-21Why Can't the U.S. Have the Debate about Naomi Klein's Book That Europe Has?
2007-09-21Why Capitalism Needs Terror: An Interview with Naomi Klein
2007-09-12Indonesia and Japan sign a comprehensive free-trade pact
2007-10-10India's Tough Choice on Iran
2008-01-04Why Iraq? Oil and U.S. Foreign Policy
2007-12-29Russia, Iran tighten the energy noose
2008-01-02Turkish accession to the European union: challenges and opportunities
2008-01-03At The Gates Of The Union
2007-12-13Dark side of the hunt for energy
2007-12-03Ending Famine, Simply by Ignoring the Experts
2007-12-14The Origin of the Palestine-Israel Conflict -- complete text
2007-12-22Iran - Nuclear Chronology - 2006
2008-01-31The North American Union and the Larger Plan
2008-01-31THE NEW WORLD ORDER' -- A Critique and Chronology
2008-01-31Key Events in the Presidency of Herbert Hoover
2008-01-28APPEAL TO ALLIES
2008-01-29Challenging a Unipolar World
2008-02-20Offshoring: The Next Industrial Revolution?
2008-02-21The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: More May Better
2008-02-22Conversations in International Relations: Interview with John J. Mearsheimer (Part I)
2008-03-03Us and Them -- The Enduring Power of Ethnic Nationalism
2008-03-04The Three Trillion Dollar War: Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard Economist Linda Bilmes on the True Cost of the US Invasion and Occupation of Iraq
2008-03-10God’s Country
2008-03-15Russia throws a wrench in NATO's works
2008-06-23Exclusive: Ex-UK Army Chief in Iraq Confirms Peak Oil Motive for War; Praises Fraudulent Reconstruction Programmes
2008-06-24Chomsky Speaks -- On Iraq, Iran and Norman Finkelstein
2008-07-09Shackled Warrior
2008-07-07G8 accused of backtracking on Africa pledges
2008-06-27President Delivers "State of the Union"
2008-08-03Korea's No. 1 Money Manager Says Genghis Khan Model for Funds
2008-08-04How The United States Reversed Its Policy On Bombing Civilians
2008-08-04Bad News Keeps Coming for the European Economy
2008-07-31The Med’s moment comes
2008-08-01The Democrats & National Security
2008-08-01The final countdown
2008-07-19It's a Class War, Stupid
2008-07-22CSIS-SCHIEFFER DIALOGUE: OPENING STEPS FOR A DIPLOMATIC PATH BETWEEN THE U.S. AND IRAN
2008-07-16What’s Your Consumption Factor?
2008-07-16Nations with vast oil wealth gaining clout
2008-03-24Global Migration Patterns and Job Creation
2008-04-24A Dissenter’s Guide to Foreign Policy
2008-04-23NATO and European Energy Security
2008-04-14IMF Press Briefing on the Spring 2008 World Economic Outlook
2008-06-08G8, Asia urge oil production hike as prices soar
2008-06-06Stumbling toward Eurabia
2008-06-03Some European Perspectives on Terrorism
2008-06-01Why NATO Troops Can't Deliver Peace in Afghanistan
2008-05-14NATO at a Crossroads
2008-05-17Planned US Israeli Attack on Iran: Will there be a War against Iran?
2008-05-04Downsized Discourse: Classroom Management, Neoliberalism, and the Shaping of Correct Workplace Attitude
2008-09-26Copenhagen Consensus 2008 Challenge Paper Terrorism
2008-08-25The changes in the fight against illegal immigration in the Euro-Mediterranean area and in Euro-Mediterranean relations
2008-09-02Stoking Tensions, Risking Confrontation: A High Stakes US Gamble with Russia
2009-07-15Climate change 'will cause civilization to collapse'
2009-07-07President Barack Obama???s Moscow speech
2009-05-13The Food Issue -- Farmer in Chief
2009-04-15"We can be a benevolent superpower", interview with Jimmy Carter
2008-11-07Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Middle East and North Africa Overview
2008-11-03Redefining U.S. Interests in the Middle East
2008-11-08Finance chiefs eye first steps in revamping global system
2008-11-10The Eurabian Revolution
2008-10-24The Causes of Economic Growth
2008-10-24Russia and the World in the 21st Century
2008-12-07Timeline: Venezuela -- A chronology of key events
2008-12-06Japan’s Interests and Policies in Northeast Asia -- A Critical View
2008-12-06Slow-Motion Genocide in Occupied Palestine
2008-12-03Tesla's Creative Genius: Intuitive Knowledge predicted Networked Society
2008-11-26Understanding the Beijing Consensus
2008-11-25Some Points on Understanding China's International Environment
2008-11-12Bulgarian corruption troubling the European Union
2009-02-11The Great Crash, 2008 -- A Geopolitical Setback for the West
2008-12-29The World Economic Crisis: A Marxist Analysis
2009-01-04The Looming Arab Food Crisis
2008-12-15New York Times Misleads on Taliban Role in Opium Trade
2008-12-22Timeline: Japan
2006-12-16Revamping Us Foreign Policy, Part 1 - Full speed ahead, with menace
2006-12-12BEIJING’S NEW GRAND STRATEGY: AN OFFENSIVE WITH EXTRA-MILITARY INSTRUMENTS
2006-12-08Britons Fume as U.K. Heat Bills Rise to Decade High (Update1)
2006-12-04Afghanistan: No blood for oil - this time
2007-02-18After Neoconservatism
2007-02-22Washington's $8 Billion Shadow
2007-02-28Speech at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy
2007-03-01Heineken N.V. -- Encyclopedia Of Company Histories
2007-04-12Former Soviet Dissident Warns For EU Dictatorship
2007-04-25Gravy Train: Feeding The Pentagon By Feeding Somalia
2007-03-31The Second Lebanon War -- It probably won't be the last
2007-04-09Where Plan A left Ahmad Chalabi
2007-04-11Wen, Abe Agree on Need for `Strategic Partnership'
2007-03-15Iran's Three Hairline Cracks
2007-03-14Review of Current Trends in U.S. Foreign Policy
2007-03-05Not in our name
2007-03-06Did North Korea Cheat?
2007-03-12The history of Heineken
2007-03-29Interview: Jimmy Carter -- Nobel Prize for Peace
2007-03-19Made in USA
2007-03-20Nowadays, Angola Is Oil’s Topic A
2007-03-21WAR IS A RACKET
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2006-09-17Triple-pronged Jihad -- Military, Economic and Cultural
2006-09-09The End of Eden
2006-08-31Katrina dwarfed by regional climate impact say top aid and environment groups
2006-05-01World Leaders Launch Initiative to Accelerate Work on Global Warming
2006-05-01Scholars Predict 50 Million “Environmental Refugees” by 2010
2006-05-01China Turns Toward Africa, But Is it a Good Thing?
2006-08-24Open letter to US President George W. Bush: Accuse him and his nation
2006-05-01The Wild Web of China: Sex and Drugs, Not Reform
2006-11-14Grand Strategy as Order Building
2006-11-09Why Export Democracy?: The 'Hidden Grand Strategy' of American Foreign Policy'
2006-11-01India's economy, now with muscle
2006-11-03Demystifying Doha -- Making Sense of the WTO Agricultural Trade Talks
2006-11-19PREPARING FOR A NEW COLD WAR, Part 2 - Asymmetric challenge to the US colossus
2006-11-22Full text: Vladimir Putin interview
2006-11-26China's Economic Brawn Unsettles Japanese
2006-09-29An alternative way forward for the US
2006-10-26Vietnam’s Roaring Economy Is Set for World Stage
2007-06-29Courting Politics: A Supreme Moment in American History
2007-06-26China aims for bigger share of South Asia's water lifeline
2007-07-01Why the Future May Not Belong to Islam
2007-06-26Overcoming tensions
2007-06-22Symposium: Strategies of Death
2007-07-16The Lose-Lose War
2007-07-09UN issues desertification warning
2007-07-10Tariq Ramadan Has an Identity Issue
2007-05-04The world in 2020
2007-05-03National Security Briefing == Presented to then-Governor Bush
2007-05-01A Moratorium on Yasukuni Visits
2007-05-01Can Europe Age Gracefully? - Part I
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2007-05-15The Tony Blair story
2007-05-11Billions in Oil Missing in Iraq, U.S. Study Finds
2007-05-10Six Nightmares: Real Threats in a Dangerous World and How America Can Meet Them
2007-05-11Europe: Time of change
2007-05-18Europe diary: Serbian Radicals
2007-05-21Why It Happened the Way It Did
2007-05-22We're Number One! America Leads the World in War Profits
2007-05-24The Last Temptation of Al Gore
2007-05-27When oil and water mix
2007-06-12Current Problems in American Foreign Policy - A Talk Given to the Mount Holyoke Alumnae
2007-06-08Leaving the Zionist ghetto
2007-06-11Sarkozy’s old familiar song
2007-06-16The Osama Files
2007-06-17General Tommy Franks -- An exclusive interview with America's top general in the war on terrorism
2007-07-31Franco – Arab Ties Could Yet Survive Sarkozy’s U-Turn
2007-08-20New Power in Africa -- Entrepreneurs From China Flourish in Africa
2007-08-23No law for oil