For the past four decades, China has held the title of "World's Greenest Nation." America is also very green -- with envy (from "Reports from 2050, a series of imagined reports from the year 2050, supported by current news, discoveries and scientific predictions).
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["
Reports from 2050" is a series of imagined reports from the year 2050, supported by current news, discoveries and scientific predictions. To see what's real and what's not, click on the links within the text.]
JANUARY 18, 2050 (New York) -- In 2009, UK army chief
General Sir David Richard told
The Times
that the war in Afghanistan could last 40 more years. Sadly, he was
right, and the fight has been paid for in copious amounts of blood and
treasure.
For the past half century,
America has spent its once vast wealth on the never-ending conflict,
while China -- its main economic rival -- has invested mightily in
green technologies both domestically and abroad, with a particular
emphasis on investments in Africa. Once famous for its rampant
pollution,
China has been the world's greenest country since 2009 and has exported its advances in green technology to the developing world.
Along
with the Afghanistan money pit, America's hopelessly partisan politics
has also hampered any potentially transformative legislation that
substantially invests in sustainable development or renewable energy.
"While China is already boasting 'All aboard!' on a network of sleek
passenger trains that zip 200 mph and beyond between major urban
centers, the United States is still fussing about where to install a
single high-speed rail line for a proposed California project," wrote
Elizabeth McGowan in a 2011 article on
SolveClimateNews.com.
"That's
just a snapshot of how this country continues to lag behind its Asian
competitor on the clean technology front." McGowan wondered, "Can
America ever catch up?" Fast forward forty years, and what
Asian Sustainable Development Forum director
Fan Li recently dubbed the "Sino-American green divide" is now bigger than ever.
"Americans
have gotten used to big cars, big houses, big meals, big everything,"
Li wrote in an email. "The Chinese never went through that phase. They
witnessed the fall of a bloated and dysfunctional American empire
distracted by far-flung wars, and when their own middle class grew, they
avoided that pitfall. They shunned military conflict. They saved their
money. And when they spent it abroad, they invested in the future.
Chinese companies don't do 'big.' They do 'smart.' China will likely
never have to bail out the private sector like America did with the
banks and the carmakers during the
Great Recession."
"China...has
set ambitious targets for wind, biomass and solar energy and, for the
first time, took the top spot within the G-20 and globally for overall
clean energy finance and investment," according to the 2010
Pew Charitable Trusts report "
Who's Winning the Clean Energy Race?"
Noting
that "the United States slipped to second place," the Pew report
stated, "There are reasons to be concerned about America's competitive
position in the clean energy marketplace," adding that, "In all, 10
G-20 members devoted a greater percentage of gross domestic product to clean energy than the United States in 2009."
In 2011,
ClimateProgress.org
reported that in 2010 China installed about 16,000 megawatts of wind
power, compared to only 5,000 in the United States. According to a
report by
American Superconductor Corporation,
a maker of wind machine parts, China was "on a pace to surpass the
United States by the end 2010 to become the world's largest wind market,
with an installed wind capacity exceeding 40,000 MW."
By early
2011, China surpassed the United States in wind power, and has
maintained its position as the world's wind energy leader for the past
four decades, with the United States and Germany at second and third
place, respectively.
Where does the United States go from here?
Considering the nation's sluggish investment in high-speed rails, the
sky-high costs of air travel and the relative weakness of the
newly-minted
Amero
currency, it will probably take a long time to get to wherever "there"
is. And if the nation ever does bridge the growing "Sino-American green
divide," it should probably bring along a Chinese-English dictionary.
[Part of the series " Reports from 2050 ."]
Authors Website: http://momentech.blogspot.com
Authors Bio:
Reynard Loki is a New York-based artist, writer and editor. He is the environment and food editor at AlterNet.org, a progressive news website. He is also the co-founder of MomenTech, a New York-based experimental production studio whose projects exploring cosmology, post-humanism, neo-nomadism and futurism have been presented around the world, including Center for Book Arts (New York, NY); DUMBO Arts Festival (Brooklyn, NY) Eastern Bloc Center for New Media and Interdisciplinary Art (Montreal), ITCH Magazine, School of Literature, Language and Media, Wits University (Johannesburg, South Africa); 48 Stunden Neukölln Festival (Berlin); Daet New Media Festival (Philippines); 3///3 (Athens, Greece), Fotanian Open Studio (Hong Kong) and Magmart International Video Festival (Naples). Reynard is a contributing author of Biomes and Ecosystems: An Encyclopedia (Salem Press, 2013). His writing has also appeared in Salon, Truthout, Justmeans, EcoWatch, GreenBiz, Resilience.org and Social Earth.