Outsourcing/expanding pollution to China PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stumo   
Monday, 24 September 2007

We have shredded our food safety system with gargantuan increases in imported food.  Decades were spent making our food safer after Upton Sinclair wrote "The Jungle" in 1920, and we passed comprehensive food inspection laws in the 1960's.  

We have shredded our pollution reduction system with gargantuan increases in the rate of outsourced industries.  Decades were spent making our air, water and landfills cleaner since the first environmental laws were passed in the 1970's. 

The New York Times Editorial Board loves trade without trade law enforcement... and hates pollution, including the vast brown cloud and toxic waters emanating from China.  The two views of that multi-headed editorial board cannot be reconciled.  Trade and outsourcing may be the biggest environmental problem today.

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Today's editorial by that board spells out the China pollution problem, but blindly fails to connect it to outsourcing industry.  The piece starts with this quote:

In 1991, Lawrence Summers — then the World Bank’s chief economist and later Bill Clinton’s Treasury secretary — wrote a memo suggesting that the bank should encourage the world’s dirty industries to move to developing countries. The forgone earnings of workers sickened or killed by pollution would be lower in low-wage countries, he noted, while people in poor countries also cared less about a clean environment. “The economic logic of dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest-wage country is impeccable,” he wrote.

Then this accurate observation is made:

China makes more than a third of the world’s steel, half of its cement, about a third of its aluminum. It also consumes more coal than the United States, Europe and Japan combined. Its environmental degradation is a match for Dickens at his bleakest: airborne pollution causes more than 650,000 premature deaths a year. ... The problem doesn’t stay there. China is about to surpass, or has already surpassed, the United States as the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases.

Here are additional facts.  U.S. environmental laws actually control pollution.  The "industry" category's share of total U.S. carbon emissions is less than half the "industry" share of China's overall emissions.  (Other major contributing categories are power, transportation, residential, etc.).

 

This is because U.S. environmental laws and U.S. industry have made large gains in cleaning up their act, better than most countries have.  But as the NY Times and the U.S. government promote all outsourcing of industry as "the market working", as opposed to recognizing policy failure, we not only outsource pollution, but increase it.

Imagine shipping a load of American made, low level radioactive waste to a poor, Western Sahara country for burial/disposal... and by the time the cargo reached Africa, it had expanded to eight shiploads.  And then imagine that after disposal, the radiation was being emitted to expose populations across the world.  That is what we are doing.

 

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