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York Centre for Asian Research Update Issue 50, Friday, June 16, 2006
In this issue
|
David Wurfel Award |
YCAR establishes David Wurfel Award |
| Migration Conference | York to host conference on forced migration and refugee rights |
|
Asia Job Posting |
Aga Khan Foundation seeks Program Management Professional |
|
A Space Gallery Exhibition |
Shaping the Orbit features Chinese-Canadian artists' works of art |
|
Asia News |
Pollution from Chinese coal casts a global shadow |
YCAR establishes David Wurfel Award
YCAR
has recently set up a David Wurfel Award to provide financial support to an
honors undergraduate or masters graduate student who intends to conduct thesis
research on the topic of Filipino history, culture, or society. Prof. David
Wurfel (left) is a Philippine specialist who received his PhD from Cornell
University's Southeast Asia Program. He is a Senior Research Associate at YCAR
and professor emeritus of political science at the University of Windsor.
Through this award he hopes to contribute to the emergence in Ontario of a new
generation of Filipino leadership that is well-grounded in Philippine history,
culture and public affairs. The award is open to students enrolled in York
University in social sciences or humanities programs (including the Faculties of
Law and Environmental Studies). Preference will be given to applicants of
Filipino origin who show promise of leadership in the Filipino community in
Canada. The application form and details will be made available on the YCAR
website on July 1. The deadline for application for the award is October 15.
__________________
YCAR is also seeking two graduate assistants (GAs) for Fall 2006/Winter 2007. One GA (preferably incoming MA student) will be attached to the Graduate Diploma in Asian Studies; the other (first or second year MA student) will assist with general tasks around the centre (event organization, membership, resource centre, research assistance). Preference will be given to graduate students with strong interests in Asian studies including Asian diaspora. Interested students should submit a cover letter and resume to Rhoda Reyes, Centre Coordinator, before June 30, 2006.

The 10th Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration will bring together academics, including York researchers; NGOs; policy makers; government representatives; and forced migrants themselves from a wide array of disciplinary and geographic backgrounds. It is the first time the conference will be held in North America. The theme of the conference is "Talking across borders: New dialogues in forced migration studies". Monte Solberg, federal minister of citizenship and immigration, will speak at the opening plenary session June 18. Topics for discussion include: gender, education and forced migration in Afghanistan; new perspectives on migration and security; forced migration in Africa, East and Southeast Asia; North-South dialogues; Women in Conflict Zones Network (WICZNET); child survivors of trafficking for sexual and labor exploitation; role of NGOs, among a host of others.
The conference is open to anyone with an interest in the field of forced migration. The International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM) is the preeminent international body for those interested in forced migration. The IASFM is an independent, self-governing community of scholars and practitioners who are concerned about understanding forced migration and about improving the formulation of policies and administration of programs dealing with refugees and other displaced persons. York's Centre for Refugee Studies was founded in 1988 and was the second centre of its kind in the world, following the Refugee Studies Centre at the University of Oxford. CRS remains one of the largest and most active refugee studies centres to date. For more information about the conference, or to register, visit the conference website. Source: Y-File News Today.
Aga Khan Foundation Canada seeks Program Management Professional
Aga
Khan Foundation Canada (AKFC) is a non-denominational, not-for-profit,
international development agency that promotes sustainable and equitable
development in Asia and Africa. As opportunities to expand and deepen the impact
of development programming within AKFC and the larger Aga Khan Development
Network continues to grow, AKFC requires the services of a program management
professional to join its team in Ottawa. The Program management professional
will contribute to AKFC's operations in one or more of the following four areas:
Interested and qualified applicants should send their resume and a brief statement of interest. Applications should be received no later than June 26, 2006. Job Contact Information: Ezmina Nazarali, Program Assistant, Aga Khan Foundation Canada. Email: humanresources@akfc.ca.
Shaping the Orbit features
works by artists Li Chai, Ying-Yueh Chuang and Karen Tam
Curated by Doris Ha Lin Sung, June 16 - July 22, 2006
Opening Friday June 16, with Artist talks, 7 PM followed by Reception until 9
PM
Traditionally,
craft has been a social practice, in which women negotiate their relationship in
the familial and social spheres. Following this tradition, the artists in
Shaping the Orbit use ceramic, textile, paper cutting and assemblages to
articulate the transient nature of their own experience of cultural crossing and
displacement as Chinese-Canadian women.
Ying-Yueh Chuang received a diploma in fine arts from Langara College in
1997, a BFA from the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in 1999, and a
master’s degree with a major in ceramics from the Nova Scotia College of Art and
Design in 2001. She has exhibited in Taiwan, Canada, the U.S., Korea, Hungary,
and Australia and her work is found in public and private collections including
the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, the Canada Council Art Bank, and the WOCEK
Icheon World Ceramic Centre in Korea. She is currently working as a studio
ceramist in Toronto.
Montréal-based artist Karen Tam holds an MFA in sculpture from the School
of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from Concordia University. She has
participated in exhibitions and artist residencies across Canada, in Ireland,
and in the United States.
Doris
Sung is a Toronto-based visual artist and curator. Sung graduated with an
MFA in 2004 and is currently a PhD candidate in the Social and Political Thought
program at York University and YCAR Graduate Associate. Her research focuses on
contemporary Chinese visual culture and her artwork investigates the
relationship between Daoism and visuality.
A Space Gallery, 401 Richmond Street
West, Suite #110, Toronto, ON M5V 3A8
Gallery hours are Tuesday to Friday 11 AM – 6 PM, Saturday 12 noon – 5 PM
All events are free to attend. For further information contact the gallery
at info@aspacegallery.org or
call 416-979-9633.
HANJING,
China — One of China's lesser-known exports is a dangerous brew of soot,
toxic chemicals and climate-changing gases from the smokestacks of
coal-burning power plants. In early April, a dense cloud of pollutants over
Northern China sailed to nearby Seoul, sweeping along dust and desert sand
before wafting across the Pacific. An American satellite spotted the cloud as
it crossed the West Coast.
Researchers in California, Oregon and Washington noticed specks of sulfur compounds, carbon and other byproducts of coal combustion coating the silvery surfaces of their mountaintop detectors. These microscopic particles can work their way deep into the lungs, contributing to respiratory damage, heart disease and cancer. Filters near Lake Tahoe in the mountains of eastern California "are the darkest that we've seen" outside smoggy urban areas, said Steven S. Cliff, an atmospheric scientist at the University of California at Davis.
Unless China finds a way to clean up its coal plants and the thousands of factories that burn coal, pollution will soar both at home and abroad. The increase in global-warming gases from China's coal use will probably exceed that for all industrialized countries combined over the next 25 years, surpassing by five times the reduction in such emissions that the Kyoto Protocol seeks. The sulfur dioxide produced in coal combustion poses an immediate threat to the health of China's citizens, contributing to about 400,000 premature deaths a year. It also causes acid rain that poisons lakes, rivers, forests and crops.
The sulfur pollution is so pervasive as to have an extraordinary side effect that is helping the rest of the world, but only temporarily: It actually slows global warming. The tiny, airborne particles deflect the sun's hot rays back into space. But the cooling effect from sulfur is short-lived. By contrast, the carbon dioxide emanating from Chinese coal plants will last for decades, with a cumulative warming effect that will eventually overwhelm the cooling from sulfur and deliver another large kick to global warming, climate scientists say. A warmer climate could lead to rising sea levels, the spread of tropical diseases in previously temperate climes, crop failures in some regions and the extinction of many plant and animal species, especially those in polar or alpine areas.
Coal is indeed China's double-edged sword — the new economy's black gold and the fragile environment's dark cloud. Already, China uses more coal than the United States, the European Union and Japan combined. And it has increased coal consumption 14 percent in each of the past two years in the broadest industrialization ever. Every week to 10 days, another coal-fired power plant opens somewhere in China that is big enough to serve all the households in Dallas or San Diego. To make matters worse, India is right behind China in stepping up its construction of coal-fired power plants — and has a population expected to outstrip China's by 2030.
Aware of the country's growing reliance on coal and of the dangers from burning so much of it, China's leaders have vowed to improve the nation's energy efficiency. No one thinks that effort will be enough. To make a big improvement in emissions of global-warming gases and other pollutants, the country must install the most modern equipment — equipment that for the time being must come from other nations. Industrialized countries could help by providing loans or grants, as the Japanese government and the World Bank have done, or by sharing technology. But Chinese utilities have in the past preferred to buy cheap but often-antiquated equipment from well connected domestic suppliers instead of importing costlier gear from the West.
The Chinese government has been reluctant to approve the extra spending. Asking customers to shoulder the bill would set back the government's efforts to protect consumers from inflation and to create jobs and social stability. But each year China defers buying advanced technology, older equipment goes into scores of new coal-fired plants with a lifespan of up to 75 years. "This is the great challenge they have to face," said David Moskovitz, an energy consultant who advises the Chinese government. "How can they continue their rapid growth without plunging the environment into the abyss?"
Living Better With Coal
Wu Yiebing and his wife, Cao Waiping, used to
have very little effect on their environment. But they have tasted the rising
standard of living from coal-generated electricity and they are hooked, even
as they suffer the vivid effects of the damage their new lifestyle creates.
Years ago, the mountain village where they
grew up had electricity for only several hours each evening, when water was
let out of a nearby dam to turn a small turbine. They lived in a mud hut,
farmed by hand from dawn to dusk on hillside terraces too small for tractors,
and ate almost nothing but rice on an income of $25 a month.
Today, they live here in Hanjing, a small town in central China where Mr. Wu
earns nearly $200 a month. He operates a large electric drill 600 feet
underground in a coal mine, digging out the fuel that has powered his own
family's advancement. He and his wife have a stereo, a refrigerator, a
television, an electric fan, a phone and light bulbs, paying just $2.50 a
month for all the electricity they can burn from a nearby coal-fired power
plant. They occupy a snug house with brick walls and floors and a cement
foundation — the bricks and cement are products of the smoking,
energy-ravenous factories that dot the valley. Ms. Cao decorates the family's
home with calendar pictures of Zhang Ziyi, the Chinese film star. She is
occasionally dismissive about the farming village where she lived as a girl
and now seldom visits except over Chinese New Year.
"We couldn't wear high heels then because the paths were so bad and we were
always carrying heavy loads," said Ms. Cao, who was wearing makeup, a stylish
yellow pullover, low-slung black pants and black pumps with slender three-inch
heels on a recent Sunday morning.
One-fifth of the world's population already lives in affluent countries with
lots of air-conditioning, refrigerators and other appliances. This group
consumes a tremendous amount of oil, natural gas, nuclear power, coal and
alternative energy sources. Now China is trying to bring its fifth of the
world's population, people like Mr. Wu and Ms. Cao, up to the same standard.
One goal is to build urban communities for 300 million people over the next
two decades.
Already, China has more than tripled the number of air-conditioners in the
past five years, to 84 per 100 urban households. And it has brought modern
appliances to hundreds of millions of households in small towns and villages
like Hanjing. The difference from most wealthy countries is that China depends
overwhelmingly on coal. And using coal to produce electricity and run
factories generates more global-warming gases and lung-damaging pollutants
than relying on oil or gas.
Indeed, the Wu family dislikes the light gray smog of sulfur particles and
other pollutants that darkens the sky and dulls the dark green fields of young
wheat and the white blossoms of peach orchards in the distance. But they
tolerate the pollution. "Everything else is better here," Mr. Wu said. "Now we
live better, we eat better."
China's Dark Clouds
Large areas of North-Central China have been devastated by the spectacular
growth of the local coal industry. Severe pollution extends across Shaanxi
Province, where the Wus live, and neighboring Shanxi Province, which produces
even more coal. Not long ago, in the historic city of Datong, about 160 miles
west of Beijing, throngs of children in colorful outfits formed a ceremonial
line at the entrance to the city's 1,500-year-old complex of Buddhist cave
grottoes to celebrate Datong's new designation as one of China's "spiritually
civilized cities." The event was meant to bolster pride in a city desperately
in need of good news. Two years ago, Datong, long the nation's coal capital,
was branded one of the world's most-polluted cities. Since then, the air
quality has only grown worse. Datong is so bad that last winter the city's air
quality monitors went on red alert. Desert dust and particulate matter in the
city had been known to force the pollution index into warning territory, above
300, which means people should stay indoors.
On Dec. 28, the index hit 350. "The pollution is worst during the winter,"
said Ji Youping, a former coal miner who now works with a local environmental
protection agency. "Datong gets very black. Even during the daytime, people
drive with their lights on." Of China's 10 most polluted cities, four,
including Datong, are in Shanxi Province. The coal-mining operations have
damaged waterways and scarred the land. Because of intense underground mining,
thousands of acres are prone to sinking, and hundreds of villages are
blackened with coal waste.
There is a Dickensian feel to much of the region. Roads are covered in coal
tar; houses are coated with soot; miners, their faces smeared almost entirely
black, haul carts full of coal rocks; the air is thick with the smell of
burning coal. There are growing concerns about the impact of this coal boom on
the environment. The Asian Development Bank says it is financing pollution
control programs in Shanxi because the number of people suffering from lung
cancer and other respiratory diseases in the province has soared over the past
20 years. Yet even after years of government-mandated cleanup efforts the
region's factories belch black smoke.
The government has promised to close the foulest factories and to shutter
thousands of illegal mines, where some of the worst safety and environmental
hazards are concentrated. But no one is talking about shutting the region's
coal-burning power plants, which account for more than half the pollution. In
fact, Shanxi and Shaanxi are rapidly building new coal-fired plants to keep
pace with soaring energy demand. To meet that demand, which includes burning
coal to supply power to Beijing, Shanxi Province alone is expected to produce
almost as much coal as was mined last year in Germany, England and Russia
combined. Burning all that coal releases enormous quantities of sulfur.
"Sulfur dioxide is China's No. 1 pollution problem," said Barbara A. Finamore,
a senior attorney at the
Natural Resources Defense
Council's China Clean Energy Program in
Washington. "This is the most serious acid rain problem in the world."
China released about 22.5 million tons of sulfur in 2004, more than twice the
amount released in the United States, and a Chinese regulator publicly
estimated last autumn that emissions would reach 26 million tons for 2005,
although no official figures have been released yet. Acid rain now falls on 30
percent of China. Studies have found that the worst effects of acid rain and
other pollution occur within several hundred miles of a power plant, where the
extra acidity of rainfall can poison crops, trees and lakes alike. But China
is generating such enormous quantities of pollution that the effects are felt
farther downwind than usual. Sulfur and ash that make breathing a hazard are
being carried by the wind to South Korea, Japan and beyond.
Not enough of the Chinese emissions reach the United States to have an
appreciable effect on acid rain yet. But, they are already having an effect in
the mountains in West Coast states. These particles are dense enough that, at
maximum levels during the spring, they account at higher altitudes for a fifth
or more of the maximum levels of particles allowed by the latest federal air
quality standards. Over the course of a year, Chinese pollution averages 10 to
15 percent of allowable levels of particles. The amounts are smaller for
lower-lying cities, like Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
China is also the world's largest emitter of mercury, which has been linked to
fetal and child development problems, said Dan Jaffe, an atmospheric scientist
at the
University of Washington.
Unless Chinese regulators become much more aggressive over the next few years,
considerably more emissions could reach the United States. Chinese pollution
is already starting to make it harder and more expensive for West Coast cities
to meet stringent air quality standards, said Professor Cliff of the
University of California, slowing four decades of progress toward cleaner air.
Nothing Beats It
China knows it has to do something about its dependence on coal. The
government has set one of the world's most ambitious targets for energy
conservation: to cut the average amount of energy needed to produce each good
or service by 20 percent over the next five years. But with an economy growing
10 percent a year and with energy consumption climbing even faster, a
conservation target amounting to 3.7 percent a year does not keep pace. All
new cars, minivans and sport utility vehicles sold in China starting July 1
will have to meet fuel-economy standards stricter than those in the United
States. New construction codes encourage the use of double-glazed windows to
reduce air-conditioning and heating costs and high-tech light bulbs that
produce more light with fewer watts.
Meanwhile, other sources of energy have problems. Oil is at about $70 a
barrel. Natural gas is in short supply in most of China, and prices for
imports of liquefied natural gas have more than doubled in the last three
years. Environmental objections are slowing the construction of hydroelectric
dams on China's few untamed rivers. Long construction times for nuclear power
plants make them a poor solution to addressing blackouts and other power
shortages now.
For the past three years, China has also been trying harder to develop other
alternatives. State-owned power companies have been building enormous wind
turbines up and down the coast. Chinese companies are also trying to develop
geothermal energy, tapping the heat of underground rocks, and are researching
solar power and ways to turn coal into diesel fuel. But all of these measures
fall well short. Coal remains the obvious choice to continue supplying almost
two-thirds of China's energy needs.
Choices and Consequences
China must make some difficult choices. So far, the nation has been making
decisions that it hopes will lessen the health-damaging impact on its own
country while sustaining economic growth as cheaply as possible. But those
decisions will also add to the emissions that contribute to global warming.
The first big choice involves tackling sulfur dioxide. The government is now
requiring that the smokestacks of all new coal-fired plants be fitted with
devices long used in Western power plants to remove up to 95 percent of the
sulfur. All existing coal-fired plants in China are supposed to have the
devices installed by 2010.
While acknowledging that they have missed deadlines, Chinese officials insist
they have the capacity now to install sulfur filters on every power plant
smokestack. "I don't think there will be a problem reaching this target before
2010," said Liu Deyou, chief engineer at the Beijing SPC Environment
Protection Tech Engineering Company, the sulfur-filter manufacturing arm of
one of the five big, state-owned utilities. Japan may be 1,000 miles east of
Shanxi Province, but the Japanese government is so concerned about acid rain
from China that it has agreed to lend $125 million to Shanxi. The money will
help pay for desulfurization equipment for large, coal-fired steel plants in
the provincial capital, Taiyuan.
The question is how much the state-owned power companies will actually use the
pollution control equipment once it is installed. The equipment is costly to
maintain and uses enormous amounts of electricity that could instead be sold
to consumers. Moreover, regulated electricity tariffs offer little reward for
them to run the equipment. In 2002, the Chinese government vowed to cut sulfur
emissions by 10 percent by 2005. Instead, they rose 27 percent. If Chinese
officials act swiftly, sulfur emissions could be halved in the next couple of
decades, power officials and academic experts say. But if China continues to
do little, sulfur emissions could double, creating even more devastating
health and environmental problems.
Even so, halving sulfur emissions has its own consequences: it would make
global warming noticeable sooner. China contributes one-sixth of the world's
sulfur pollution. Together with the emissions from various other countries,
those from China seem to offset more than one-third of the warming effect from
manmade carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere, according to several climate
models. But the sulfur particles typically drift to the ground in a week and
stop reflecting much sunlight. Recent research suggests that it takes up to 10
years before a new coal-fired power plant has poured enough long-lasting
carbon dioxide into the air to offset the cooling effect of the plant's weekly
sulfur emissions.
Climate experts say that, ideally, China would cut emissions of sulfur and
carbon dioxide at the same time. But they understand China's imperative to
clean up sulfur more quickly because it has a far more immediate effect on
health. "It's sort of unethical to expect people not to clean up their air
quality for the sake of the climate," said Tami Bond, an atmospheric scientist
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The Hunt for Efficiency
The second big decision facing China lies in how efficiently the heat from
burning coal is converted into electricity. The latest big power plants in
Western countries are much more efficient. Their coal-heated steam at very
high temperatures and pressures can generate 20 to 50 percent more kilowatts
than older Chinese power plants, even as they eject the same carbon-dioxide
emissions and potentially lower sulfur emissions.
China has limited the construction of small power plants, which are
inefficient, and has required the use of somewhat higher steam temperatures
and pressures. But Chinese officials say few new plants use the highest
temperatures and pressures, which require costly imported equipment. And
Chinese power utilities are facing a squeeze. The government has kept
electricity cheap, by international standards, to keep consumers happy. But
this has made it hard for utilities to cover their costs, especially as world
coal prices rise.
The government has tried to help by limiting what mines can charge utilities
for coal. Mines have responded by shipping the lowest-quality, dirtiest,
most-contaminated coal to power plants, say power and coal executives. The
utilities have also been reluctant to spend on foreign equipment, steering
contracts to affiliates instead. "When you have a 1 percent or less profit,"
said Harley Seyedin, chief executive of the First Washington Group, owner of
oil-fired power plants in Southeastern China's Guangdong Province, "you don't
have the cash flow to invest or to expand in a reasonable way."
A New Technology
The third big choice involves whether to pulverize coal and then burn the
powder, as is done now, or convert the coal into a gas and then burn the gas,
in a process known as integrated gasification combined combustion, or I.G.C.C.
One advantage of this approach is that coal contaminants like mercury and
sulfur can be easily filtered from the gas and disposed. Another advantage is
that carbon dioxide can be separated from the emissions and pumped
underground, although this technology remains unproven.
Leading climate scientists like this approach to dealing with China's rising
coal consumption. "There's a whole range of things that can be done; we should
try to deploy coal gasification," said Dr. Rajendra K. Pachauri, chairman of
the
United Nations-affiliated
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The World Bank in 2003 offered a
$15 million grant from the Global Environment Facility to help China build its
first state-of-the-art power plant to convert coal into a gas before burning
it. The plan called for pumping combustion byproducts from the plant
underground.
But the Chinese government put the plan on hold after bids to build the plant
were higher than expected. Chinese officials have expressed an interest this
spring in building five or six power plants with the new technology instead of
just one. But they are in danger of losing the original grant if they do not
take some action soon, said Zhao Jian-ping, the senior energy specialist in
the Beijing office of the World Bank. Another stumbling block has been that
China wants foreign manufacturers to transfer technological secrets to Chinese
rivals, instead of simply filling orders to import equipment, said Anil
Terway, director of the East Asia energy division at the Asian Development
Bank. "The fact that they are keen to have the technologies along with the
equipment is slowing things down," he said.
Andy Solem, vice president for China infrastructure at
General Electric,
a leading manufacturer of coal gasification equipment, said he believed that
China would place orders in 2007 or 2008 for the construction of a series of
these plants. But he said some technology transfer was unavoidable. Western
companies could help Chinese businesses take steps to reduce carbon-dioxide
emissions, like subsidizing the purchase of more efficient boilers. Some
companies already have such programs in other countries, to offset the
environmental consequences of their own carbon-dioxide emissions at home, and
are looking at similar projects in China. But the scale of emissions in China
to offset is enormous.
For all the worries about pollution from China, international climate experts
are loath to criticize the country without pointing out that the average
American still consumes more energy and is responsible for the release of 10
times as much carbon dioxide as the average Chinese. While China now generates
more electricity from coal than does the United States, America's consumption
of gasoline dwarfs China's, and burning gasoline also releases carbon dioxide.
An Insatiable Demand?
The Chinese are still far from achieving what has become the basic standard in
the West. Urban elites who can afford condominiums are still a tiny fraction
of China's population. But these urban elites are role models with a lifestyle
sought by hundreds of millions of Chinese. Plush condos on sale in Shanghai
are just a step toward an Americanized lifestyle that is becoming possible in
the nation's showcase city.
Far from the Wu family in rural Shaanxi, the Lu Bei family grew up in cramped,
one-room apartments in Shanghai. Now the couple own a large three-bedroom
apartment in the city's futuristic Pudong financial district. They have two
television sets, four air-conditioners, a microwave, a dishwasher, a washing
machine and three computers. They also have high-speed Internet access. "This
is my bedroom," said Lu Bei, a 35-year-old insurance agency worker entering a
spacious room with a king-size bed. "We moved here two years ago. We had a
baby and wanted a decent place to live."
For millions of Chinese to live like the Lus with less damage to the
environment, energy conservation is crucial. But curbing that usage would be
impossible as long as China keeps energy prices low. Gasoline still costs $2 a
gallon, for example, and electricity is similarly cheap for many users. With
Chinese leaders under constant pressure to create jobs for the millions of
workers flooding from farms into cities each year, as well as the rapidly
growing ranks of college graduates, there has been little enthusiasm for a
change of strategy. Indeed, China is using subsidies to make its energy even
cheaper, a strategy that is not unfamiliar to Americans, said Kenneth
Lieberthal, a China specialist at the
University of Michigan.
"They have done in many ways," he said, "what we have done."