« Over the 16-year period since 2008, the number of years it takes for an average Chinese manufacturing worker to afford a basic plug-in EV has fallen from ~9 years to <1.
This is while the technical/performance specs have increased dramatically. »
Solar :
« This year, China will add more solar power than the US’ entire installed capacity!
🔹hOw aBoUt cOaL? China will add 50GW of coal power plants this year, while adding 200GW of renewable. »
More : 1, 2, 3, 4
Nuclear as well :
Oil :
Even forests
And pollution :
« China’s pollution levels in 2021 had fallen 42% from 2013 »
«If China’s contribution were disregarded, global air pollution would have increased, not declined, in the 2010s » :
Seems like the future isn’t here.
Great post but the title doesn’t do it justice. This covers so much more than just electric vehicles.
Honestly even though i’ve tried to keep up with the news on China’s advances in sustainable development these graphs still shock me. Talk about a Great Leap Forward, this is it!
Or maybe this should be considered normal rate of advancement for a well run country and we’re all just too blackpilled from living in a stagnating capitalist dystopia.
Yeah, and everyone should be happy about this, a greener Earth is a good thing for everyone, they did it, and we can avoid the apocalypse by simply copying them(, not on coal but on everything else, and they’re not only successful in ecology, we’re so aggressive, as if collaboration/harmony wasn’t desirable&doable).
Usually, it’s “their system is better than ours in those domains, and i want to imitate that”, here it’s more that we’re going to die by the end of century because the forces of the market aren’t quick enough, apparently.
As in Wandering Earth, we could collaborate peacefully, at least if it’s a question of survival ?
What i was trying to point out is that ecology was already very much discussed in the 60s, with the question of the scarcity of ressources already in mind contrary to what one could have thought(, now there’s some talk of “eco-terrorists”, but again eco-fascism isn’t a word that appeared last year), and the majority of the population believes that we’re going to die if we don’t do something, and we’ve already killed a large part of the biosphere.
If our leaders believe that we absolutely have to act NOW, like we’re being told, then journalists should help the viewer understand why the current strategy to survive( climate change) hasn’t borne fruits yet, or is it not an imminent threat that has to be resolved ? Perhaps are we already doing the most that can be done, and/or are on a good track, so there’s no reason to talk about it anymore ? Well, the People’s Republic of China found a more efficient solution, yet we’re not glad to have a greater chance of survival ? Are we not even going to use it ?I’m not satisfied with what i wrote, i’m trying to write in a logical manner, but it still appears to be nonsensical. There’s either a big conspiracy to make us believe that climate change is real, or we indeed have to act NOW because we’re not even sure if we’ll make it in time to stabilize the rising temperature of the planet. I don’t see a third option.
My uneasiness may originate from me not having grasped the fact(?) that we’re going to die because we’re not changing our behaviors fast enough, and/or i suppose that any talk of impedent doom wouldn’t seem serious in the first place.
A majority may indeed believe in the urgency of climate, but perhaps only in theory, as some distant conceptual object, i.d.k., but we’re not voting for the most ecological political parties b.t.w., perhaps are we kinda hoping that the temperatures will stop rising by themselves, or that we’ll find out that we were already quick enough, 🤷.
If we have ‘to change/act now’/‘no time left ‘for more experimentations’/‘to find a better method’’ though, then we should be glad that a safer/‘more successful’ method has been found, and increase our chances of survival by imiting it. A long comment that should probably have been reduced to a few sentences, ~sry.
In Europe, car emissions actually went UP, because SUVs* make up the majority of sales
*latest fad
In my impression 100k renminbi is pretty expensive in terms of cars, most people I know usually have cars in the price range of 20-30k. Not sure about subsidies though.