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Asia's Achilles Heel

As China and India lose control of their economies, they are failing to provide reliable power to their citizens. How will they manage to curb carbon emissions? 

 

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Earlier this month Chinese revelers welcomed the new lunar year with a few more candles than usual. The country was gripped by a crisis in electric power production that caused California-style blackouts across the central and southern parts of the country.  Power plants could not keep up with demand, especially because they didn't have enough coal on hand to burn.

The immediate causes of China's power crisis are straightforward. Snow storms disrupted the railroads that carry most coal to power plants. Record low temperatures also boosted demand for electricity and coal. But there was a deeper cause at work. China's free-market policies—the same ones that led to China's extraordinary growth in the past decade—have eroded the government's ability to control its economy. Economic activity, by design, is shifting away from state-owned enterprises and central planning. But Beijing doesn't have structures in place to control those aspects of the economy it doesn't own outright. Market reforms are making Beijing less and less relevant to what's really going on in the economy, threatening to turn China into a "weak state." And it's not just China—India, too, is having trouble regulating its industry and economy. The phenomenon is a dark cloud on the Asian century.

If this all sounds abstract, consider that China's blackouts were mainly a byproduct of the government's struggle to manage the planned and market-based parts of the economy side-by-side.   Today, the Chinese leadership is worrying about inflation, but they have few useful tools to slow the rise in prices. A few years ago, Beijing might have dampened industrial growth by closing the spigot of finance from state-owned banks. But many newly deregulated state enterprises, as well as new privately owned companies, have found other sources of capital, including caches of massive profits accumulated over the years. One of the few industries Beijing still controls is power—it owns nearly every aspect of the grid, from generators to distributors. So Beijing decided to try and quell inflation by lowering electricity prices.

The energy industry, however, is bigger than just power generation and distribution. It includes the coal industry, which has been the object of market reforms. Starting two years ago the country largely abandoned the traditional planning system for allocating and pricing coal, the main fuel for power generators and one of the power companies' largest costs. Suppliers and buyers were allowed to negotiate on their own terms. With demand for electricity skyrocketing, suppliers had the upper hand, and coal prices rose. With Beijing keeping prices artificially low, power plants could not pass these costs to the consumer. They responded by cutting back on coal orders. As coal inventories dwindled, power generators cut back on capacity, and the lights went out.

Beijing's lack of practical control over large swaths of industry explains an increasing number of China's woes. The environment is a case in point. The government has an elaborate apparatus for environmental regulation, with strict laws on the books, but it is unwilling to enforce the measures for fear of stepping on the toes of local authorities, who usually push industrial development at the expense of greenery. Changing that power structure will require politically dangerous rewiring of the ruling Communist Party's power base. To be sure, Beijing is still powerful in some areas such as Internet regulation. And its recent success in imposing safety standards to close dangerous small coal mines, another area where Beijing is flexing its muscle, probably inadvertently contributed to the current coal crisis. Overall, however, what's most striking is Beijing's inability to impose needed regulation nor to predict what will happen when it does regulate. For example, a keystone in the government's effort to avoid future energy crises is an aggressive plan to improve energy efficiency about 4 percent per year over the current decade. The actual effect of Beijing's efficiency policies is barely one third that level.

These are not passing problems. They reveal a deep weakness in China's administration because the government has been unable to replace its Soviet-style planning system with an alternative scheme that is better suited to a market economy. Like an American film on the Wild West, much of the economy is governed by central strictures that don't really have much impact.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Mohdsheikh @ 03/29/2008 11:12:59 AM

    The world belongs to all the creation existing on earth its unpolluted should be proteted by international law and international agency which could enforce its laws against those countries causing pollution. and damaging the ecology.

  • Posted By: adityamukherjee @ 03/04/2008 9:39:53 PM

    Actually the world can probably support a few billion more people quite easily...power shortages occur because we still rely on obsolete, and in many ways when you t hink about it, ridiculous ways of getting our power...the sophistication of our energy sector/technology is like the banking industry 2 centuries back..it exits..but its hardly magical..but this is a lesser problem than people think..in fact due to nuclear energy being a well tested and minimally polluting option, within 60-70 years the world will not have an energy problem, no matter what the population...energy will be practically free...however the weakness of political structures in china/india is a reality..i don't see how it is that much of a problem for other countries..it is a problem for us living in china/india...but of course the paranoia is the favored tool of most news coverage

  • Posted By: eddiewhere @ 03/01/2008 8:03:58 AM

    AFRICANS MUST BE INSPIRIED By OBAMA. AFRICANS ARE VERy GOOD STUDENTS AND HAVE CONTRIBUTED TREMENDOUSLy TO OUR ECONOMy . I AM NOT AFRICAN HOWEVER I DO FEEL THAT OBAMA WILL GO DOWN IN AMERICAN HISTORy AS THE GREAT UNITER. CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL THE AFRICANS WORLD WIDE, TWO HUNDRED yEARS AFTER THE FAMOUS AMISTAD VERDICT AFRICANS FINALLy HAVE REALIZED THEIR SUFFERING DURING SLAVERy WAS FOR A GREATER pURpOSE.
    THE SON OF AN AFRICAN MUSLIM WITH THE MIDDLE NAME OF HUSSEIN IS ABOUT TO BECOME PRESIDENT. ONLy IN AMERICA. THERE ARE NO EXECUSES, IF yOU WORK HARD IN A MERICA yOU WILL PROSPER.
    FOR ALLL THOSE AFRICANS THAT WERE THROWN OVER BOARD LIKE "CHICKEN FEED" FOR THE SHARKS ON THE WAy TO AMRERICA.. FOR ALL THOSE AFRICANS THAT HAVE BEEN LyNCHED OR INCARCERATED WITHOUT CAUSE. THIS IS FOR yOU. GOD WORKS IN MySTERIOUS WAyS. JOHN ADAMS PROVED THAT ALL AFRICANS WERE BORN FREE.

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