Wednesday, March 18, 2009

More China Frustrations

A few days ago, China’s top climate negotiator proposed that importers of Chinese made goods should be responsible for the CO2 emitted during their manufacture. I can certainly see the logic from the Chinese perspective. Why should they have to deal with the costs of something which is not consumed by them. Fair enough.

My question then is why do they not simply add that cost to the cost of what they are exporting, thus having the cost passed on to the consumer, as they seem to be advocating? I can only imagine that their response would be something along the lines of losing out on their competitiveness for having to increase this price. But this leads me to another question. Are we now allowed to impose tariffs on goods imported from China so that they reflect the true cost of what the final consumer will have to pay for the product? I can’t see China being happy with that either, because it would amount to the same thing as them increasing their export prices. I guess perhaps they expect prices to be unchanged, and that importing governments will simply tax their populations in order to buy emissions credits to compensate for their imports. Well sorry, I don’t want to have to pay for other people’s rampant consumerism, and I certainly don’t want to be subsidizing dirty Chinese production.

In the end, it seems like this plan will simply result in more jobs being brought back to the developed world where energy efficiency is manifold greater than in China, and where our power production emits less CO2 per unit of energy produced. Once savings on shipping are taken into account (especially if one assumes that oil will be back in the $100 a barrel range when the world economy recovers) and added to the cost of paying for China’s dirty energy, the labour costs of having those jobs closer to home will not likely seem as daunting. I worry that China here is sowing another seed of its own economic collapse.

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