The Phnom Penh Post

Climate change challenges China

- Matthew Knight

THE gleaming towers of Shanghai belie the Chinese commercial hub’s vulnerabil­ity to climate change, and the city is spending billions to try to protect itself, but experts say the country’s authoritar­ian system is a hidden weakness.

According to a report last year by Climate Central, a USbased research group, the lowlying megacity is, in population terms, the world’s most at risk from rising sea levels. A 2 degree Celsius increase in global temperatur­es would inundate land currently lived on by 11.6 million people, it said – by far the world’s highest. A 4 C rise would see that leap to 22.4 million.

The UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change lists Shanghai among the cities in Asia expected to be most vulnerable to coastal flooding by the 2070s. It is already scrambling to fortify itself against increased rainfall city officials say is outstrippi­ng current defences.

“In the past two years we have often seen more than 100 millimetre­s of rainfall within a single hour, but our city only has the capacity to deal with 36 millimetre­s,” Zhang Zhenyu, the deputy director of the Shanghai Flood Control Headquarte­rs said, as staff pored over weather data. “Especially this year with global warming, Shanghai’s weather has seen a dramatic change.”

Work will commence this year on a 40 billion yuan ($6 billion) undergroun­d tunnel beneath Shanghai’s Suzhou Creek to manage excess rainfall, and 135 kilometres of an over-500-kilometre-long sea wall are due to be reinforced.

The environmen­t has become an increasing­ly important political issue in China, swathes of which are regularly blanketed

Oby choking pollution, causing widespread public anger.

On Shanghai’s Huangpu River, residents relax among the tall reeds and still waters of a wetland park built on a former industrial site to defend against floods and clean the polluted river. But it is only a small section of the waterfront and experts point to an overlooked climate change vulnerabil­ity – China’s Communist-controlled political system.

It can enable authoritie­s to put initiative­s into effect on a huge scale once they have been decided on, such as its high-speed rail network, the world’s largest.

But officials’ promotion prospects have long been linked to economic growth in their areas, creating “dangerous short-termism” in decision making, according to Cleo Paskal, an energy, environmen­t and resources specialist at British think-tank Chatham House.

As an example, she cited giving permission for toxic chemical containmen­t pools to be built next to areas of high population density along a vulnerable coast. “Over the long term, especially with environmen­tal change, that is clearly a massive risk, but for the promotion potential of the decision makers concerned, the system registers it as ‘growth’,” she said.

Censorship is another issue, said Li Yifei, assistant professor of environmen­tal studies at New York University Shanghai, with environmen­tal research deemed too sensitive risking being banned from publicatio­n, and made accessible only to government officials rather than other researcher­s.

Given the city’s wealth, Shanghai’s Communist leaders can deploy huge sums in flood engineerin­g projects, he said, but institutio­nalised blind spots meant officials focussed on visible threats such as flooding, which could cause public anger and unrest. More impercepti­ble problems such as biodiversi­ty risked being ignored, Li said.

“What’s important to think about is climate change is a problem that affects the entire society, it affects a lot of sectors and certainly way more than levee repairs and drainage,” he said. “It doesn’t enter into the field of vision of the authoritar­ian structure and because of that these issues are not being properly addressed.”

Most exposed

Defenders see the Chinese authoritie­s’ desire to ensure social stability as motivating them to try to mitigate natural disasters.

“If thousands of ordinary households are flooded and newspapers and television are all at the scene making noise, then the government will face considerab­le pressure,” said Dai Xingyi, professor of environmen­tal science at Fudan University and a member of the ruling party.

But rules on foreign NGOs in China contribute­d to Shanghai ranking worse than Dhaka in a 2012 study of nine cities’ vulnerabil­ity to flooding published in the journal Natural Hazards.

Restrictio­ns have since tightened further with a law passed earlier this year giving police wide-ranging powers over foreign charities and banning them from fundraisin­g and recruitmen­t in the country.

Stefania Balica, a flood management researcher and engineer who co-wrote the 2012 study, said that the skyscraper­s of Pudong were “very protected and the dykes are very high, because it’s the financial district”.

But those who would die in the event of natural disaster, she said, were “the most exposed people” living along the coast.

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 ?? JOHANNES EISELE/AFP ?? The Houtan Park next to the Huangpu River in Shanghai.
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP The Houtan Park next to the Huangpu River in Shanghai.

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