Life in China
Greenpeace in the Middle Kingdom | Greenpeace in the Middle Kingdom |
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| Tuesday, 14 April 2009 | |
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It is hard not to notice the growing environmental crisis in China even if you are living outside of the country. But the fact that many NGOs are fighting this crisis in China may be out of your radar. When I first started working for Greenpeace in early 2002, it was just about to open its first formal office in Beijing. I joined, because I was a Greenpeace volunteer and I loved it. I was wishing to broaden my perspective beyond Hong Kong. I had moved to the city with my family from Fujian province when I was five. I have witnessed the Beijing office grow from a handful of staff to a size now bigger than Greenpeace UK. There are almost 50 staff now. But China’s environmental problems have grown even faster. We are proud of what we have achieved over the years, but we are under no illusion that much more needs be done if we are to save the environment in China. China – whose Chinese name means Middle Kingdom – is really central to the global problem of environmental protection. A World Bank report in 2006 says 16 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities is in China; everyday Beijing alone adds 1,500 more new cars to its congested roads; and the country is now the world’s top emitter of greenhouse gases, the culprit behind global warming. But it is unfair to blame China alone. True that half of all tropical logs traded in the world are destined for China, but one third of the imported timber is turned into products and exported to the UK and other developed countries. Unsustainable consumption patterns in the West are fuelling the environmental crisis in China. We use our global presence to leverage change in China. I was in London four years ago to meet B&Q’s senior management with our UK colleagues. After months of dialogue with the company back in Shanghai and Beijing, B&Q, the largest home furnishing retailer in China, finally committed to sell timber products made from certified sustainable forests. But ultimately the change has to come from within China. This event marked the beginning of our campaign to create strong public momentum in China, to push the government to increase its use of renewable energy, to move away from coal burning and to take leadership role in reaching a strong global climate agreement when the world’s governments meet in Copenhagen this December. This will be the most challenging campaign we have ever undertaken in China, but nothing is easy in the Middle Kingdom. When the future of the country and the planet is at stake, giving up is not an option. Reaching out for more support is. We are writing to you, hoping that the fight by Greenpeace and other NGOs in China will fall within your radar, and you will tell your family and friends in China about it as well. Please read about Greenpeace China’s campaigns at: http://www.greenpeace.org/china/en/ Sze Pang Cheung was born in Fujian and grew up in Hong Kong. He has worked for Greenpeace China since 2002 and now splits his time between the Hong Kong and Beijing offices. He has a 19-month old daughter.
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