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No Tree Hugging Hippies Ever Complain About This But It Is Always America, America
China Burning and Consuming Most
Of World's Coal
China's coal consumption has grown
rapidly in recent years, and is now far larger than anything the
world has ever seen, with more than 3.2
billion tonnes per year, almost as much per year as all
other countries combined, data from the U.S.
Energy Information Administration showed Wednesday.
According to the report, Chinese production
and consumption of the fossil fuel rose for the 13th
consecutive year in 2012, the last full year
for which statistics are available. In comparative terms, the
nation produced nearly four times as much coal as the second
largest producer, the United States, which had a 12% share of
global production.
China's dependence on coal is well known. The
fossil fuel accounts for over two thirds of the country's
total energy consumption, and four-fifths of its electricity.
The combustible has been fuelling the Chinese economy for a
while now, the report hints. Gross domestic product in 2012 grew
7.7%, though that growth rate followed a decade of 10% expansion
that ended in 2011.
Source: EIA
Beijing has recently announced a series of drastic measures aimed
to reduce rates of air pollution and curb the nation’s dependency
on the fossil fuel.
The government has said it would shut down roughly 2,000 small
coal mines this year, with a total capacity of 117 million tonnes.
The first ones to go will be small-scale old and depleting mines
in the east of the country. Authorities also want to consolidate
production from operations located in remote parts, including the
vast northwestern regions of Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang.
The idea of closing down mines is nothing new to China, which
accounts for 46% of the world's coal production according to the
EIA. In 2012 alone Beijing closed 628 medium-sized coal mines,
improved technological processes of 622 mines, merged 388 mines
and phased out 97.8 million tons of outdated production
facilities.
Last October, the Chinese government vowed to close at least 2,000
small coal mines by 2015 over safety concerns. The news came only
a month after it said it wouldn’t allow more coal-fuelled
installations near Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong, in an effort
to curb air pollution in the country’s most industrial regions.
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