China’s Extreme Weather Warnings Avoid Talk of Climate Change.
State media often frame climate change as a global problem that China can lead in solving, not as a crisis that affects its citizens’ daily lives.
As unprecedented heatwaves sweep across large parts of the Northern Hemisphere, China is telling its people to brace for another summer of dangerous floods and droughts.
China’s National Climate Center this month predicted “generally poor weather conditions” for the rest of the summer and warned that the country will face more extreme weather events than usual. In some areas, precipitation is estimated to be 20% to 50% higher than normal. Some major rivers, including the Yellow River that runs through nine provinces, are set to cause serious flooding. In a separate report, the agency said average temperatures for the first half of the year were the highest since 1961 and about 1.2 degrees Celsius above normal levels.
Not once did the center mention the phrase “climate change.” The ominous forecasts didn’t get a lot of attention on social media, either. When local news organizations reported on power shortages caused partly by hotter-than-expected weather in the manufacturing hub of Guangdong, there was no discussion of how a warming planet could play a role in the more unpredictable weather that caused factories to shut down for days.
“As someone working at China’s top meteorological department, we’re not allowed to over-stress the danger of climate change, which would be irresponsible and cause unnecessary fears,” said a National Climate Center researcher who requested anonymity to discuss private details about the issue. “Whatever we write and publish has to be backed by data, but China started on climate research very late.”
Not once did the center mention the phrase “climate change.” The ominous forecasts didn’t get a lot of attention on social media, either. When local news organizations reported on power shortages caused partly by hotter-than-expected weather in the manufacturing hub of Guangdong, there was no discussion of how a warming planet could play a role in the more unpredictable weather that caused factories to shut down for days.
“As someone working at China’s top meteorological department, we’re not allowed to over-stress the danger of climate change, which would be irresponsible and cause unnecessary fears,” said a National Climate Center researcher who requested anonymity to discuss private details about the issue. “Whatever we write and publish has to be backed by data, but China started on climate research very late.”
The caution is at odds with President Xi Jinping’s push to establish China as a global leader on climate change, encapsulated in his pledge to zero out the world’s largest carbon emissions by 2060. At home, the impacts of global warming are often presented in state media and official documents as far off in the future, or misfortunes occurring in other parts of the world, from wildfires in the U.S. to heatwaves in Europe, rather than present dangers that could stoke criticism of government policy.
Last summer, as China’s worst floods in decades caused 279 people to die or go missing, some social media users began drawing a connection between the heavy rain and record-breaking temperatures in the Arctic. Song Lianchun, director of the National Climate Center, denied at a press conference that the two phenomena were linked. Other government departments amplified the message on their official Weibo accounts, saying Song had "refuted the rumor".
Government officials and media often frame climate change as a global problem that China can lead in solving, not as a crisis that affects its citizens’ daily lives. In fact, the world’s second-biggest economy stands to suffer greatly from unchecked global warming.
The Pearl River Delta, a manufacturing hub that’s home to tens of millions of people, is the world’s most at-risk urban center from rising sea levels, according to a report by Verisk Maplecroft. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology study showed that the North China Plain, the nation’s most populous and agriculturally important region, is at risk of deadly heatwaves that could make some areas uninhabitable. A Greenpeace analysis found that 21 out of the 30 most-populated Chinese cities saw temperatures hit 30°C at least three days earlier than average from 2001 to 2020 compared with the two decades before.
The gap in China’s climate discourse means the public generally agrees with the government's official position, but few grasp the urgency of the crisis or what it means for their individual futures. In a recent survey of 5,400 Chinese aged 18 to 24 by nonprofit China Youth Climate Action Network, over 40% of them called climate change the biggest threat to the world. Yet almost 60% of them failed a simple knowledge test about the issue. They agreed that climate change is caused by a hole in the Earth’s atmosphere, confusing the impact of greenhouse gas emissions with depletion of the ozone layer.
“It’s important to point out the effects of climate change in these natural hazards,” said Liu Junyan, a campaigner at Greenpeace who suggested that one of the reasons why Beijing’s green agenda encounters resistance from local governments could be that people don’t see how global warming affects them. They’d be more willing to act, she said, if they realized that “fighting climate change is not a sacrifice for others, it’s for themselves.” — With John Liu and Karoline Kan
12 July 2021
Bloomberg Green