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RPT-China says curbing greenhouse gases difficult

Tue Oct 28, 2008 10:08pm EDT

(Repeats fixing dateline)

BEIJING, Oct 29 (Reuters) - China will find it difficult to curb growing greenhouse gas emissions any time soon, the government said, while warning of a huge economic blow from global warming.

Beijing has said it wants to combat climate change yet ensure China's economic take-off is unimpeded, and a government "white paper" on climate change issued on Wednesday reflects the uneasy fit between those imperatives.

China faces shrinking crops, worsening droughts in some regions, worsening floods in others, and melting glaciers as average global temperatures rise, the report warns.

But it says China will nonethless increase emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas from burning fossil fuels, as it seeks to leap into prosperity and lift tens of millions out of poverty.

"China will strive for rational growth of energy demand," it states. "However, its coal-dominated energy mix cannot be substantially changed in the near future, thus making the control of greenhouse gases rather difficult."

Carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases trap solar radiation, threatening to heat the atmosphere to levels that scientists warn could unleash disastrous disruption.

This resulting damage will "cause huge losses to the national economy", the paper states.

Beijing issues white papers to spell out policies on controversial topics, and this one will be part of China's armoury of arguments as it heads into a year of intense international negotiations over a new climate change pact.

China will be at the heart of efforts to forge a successor to the current Kyoto Protocol, which expires at the end of 2012.

Under the Protocol, a U.N.-led pact, poor nations do not assume targets to cap emissions. But the European Union wants developing nations to sign on to firmer goals, and Washington has refused to ratify Kyoto partly because it says the treaty is ineffective without Beijing's acceptance of mandatory caps.

China points out that per capita emissions of its 1.3 billion people are much lower than in rich countries and says the developed countries bear overwhelming responsibility for the dangerous accumulation of greenhouse gases.

But China's appetite for coal is responsible for much of the recent growth in global carbon dioxide emissions.

China is already the world's biggest consumer of coal. Demand is growing so fast that its miners have to produce an extra 200 million tonnes a year to keep up, equal to the whole coal mining industry of major producer Indonesia. (Editing by Nick Macfie)



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