If you want to dance, you gotta pay the piper. China has been the global economic success story of the last two decades, with average income has increased in leaps and bounds. The world's most populous nation has become the world's leading manufacturer of everything from sportswear to washing machines, and if some toxic toys and poison pet food occasionally find their way into shipping containers, well, that's the price you pay to get rich. However, now the cost of rapid industrialization is becoming clear, in the form of burgeoning ecological catastrophe caused by climate change and indifferent environmental policies.
Forbes reports that China's largest freshwater lake, Poyang Lake, has been so afflicted by drought that it has shrunk from 3000 square kilometres in July to 50 square kilometres today. As a result, 100,000 people living near the lake are reportedly suffering from severe water shortages, and a species of finless porpoise that lives in the lake is at risk of extinction.
And Poyang Lake is only one symptom of the evironmental problems that are troubling China, which are exacerbated by engineering projects like the Three Gorges dam. The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters has said that the drought currently affecting most of the country will probably continue through 2008, and the government is working desperately to clean up Beijing in time for this year's Olympics, in spite of sandstorms sweeping in from the Gobi desert and enveloping the city with growing frequency.
The climate change crisis isn't limited to China, of course, as anyone living in drought-stricken regions of the US an attest. However, as the world's biggest spewers of greenhouse gases, both China and the US need to take the lead in cleaning up their act. Othewise, that piper bill is going to get real expensive.
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