Source for this table: See first comment this thread.
2010
% Change___% of Total World
-8.4% 1.1% Australia
8.0% 0.1% Bangladesh
17.2% 24.6% China
0.4% 0.1% China Hong Kong SAR
18.8% 6.2% India
17.4% 1.4% Indonesia
-5.8% 3.4% Japan
-4.2% 0.6% Malaysia
-11.8% 0.1% New Zealand
2.5% 0.5% Pakistan
8.1% 0.3% Philippines
10.8% 0.1% Singapore
10.6% 1.7% South Korea
2.4% 0.8% Taiwan
4.7% 0.9% Thailand
25.9% 0.5% Vietnam
-2.1% 0.4% Other Asia Pacific
12.7% 42.8%Total Asia Pacific
What is lacking is basic cost analysis and an understanding fundamental limits (i.e. physical limitation) of specific technologies. Ignoring the cost to install solar panels, new power lines, substations, and storage batteries, there are other fundamental problems with solar. Solar energy is low intensity. Vast regions of the planet would need to be covered with solar panels. Many regions of the Asia have low hours of sunlight due to cloud cover.
We need a separate thread to solar and wind power. There are basic fundamental technical problems with those energy sources that have not been discussed. I have been looking for a book that is not all hype. This is best that I have found so far.
http://www.amazon.com/Energy-Myths-R.../dp/0844743283
I will start a separate thread to discuss this issue.
China is constructing 1000 MW of new coal fired power plants every year. China produced 50% more carbon dioxide in 2010 than the US, 24.6% per cent of the world total. Coal is by far the cheap energy source. It is appears that is reason why the Chinese are constructing 1000 MW of new coal fired power plants every year.
How do you know what you read concerning the Chinese is correct? The Chinese would not agree to monitoring of their voluntary carbon dioxide "intensity" proposal. Why would they not agree to monitoring of carbon dioxide emissions that are voluntary? The Chinese proposed carbon dioxide intensity agreement is that the Chinese would continue to produce more carbon dioxide every year however the increase in carbon dioxide emission will be less per unit of GDP.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...072577680.html
Imagine a "dream" agreement emerging from Copenhagen next week: The U.S. agrees to cut greenhouse emissions 80% by 2050, as President Barack Obama has been promising. The other developed countries promise to cut emissions by 60%. China promises to reduce its CO2 intensity by 70% in 2040. Emerging economies promise that in 2040, when their wealth per capita has grown to half that of the U.S., they will cut emissions by 80% over the following 40 years. And all parties make good on their pledges.
Environmental success, right? Wrong. Even if the goals are all met, emissions will continue rising to nearly four times the current level. Total atmospheric CO2 will rise to near 700 parts per million by 2080 (the current level is 385), and—if the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) models are right—global temperature will rise about six degrees Fahrenheit at mid latitudes.
Cheap green energy is not going to be easy. Coal is dirt cheap, and China has been installing a new gigawatt coal plant each week—enough to supply five completely new cities the size of New York every year.



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