China, India, and the Environment

Author(s):

Bawa, Kamaljit S.; Koh, Lian Pin; Lee, Tien; Liu, Jianguo "Jack"; Ramakrishnan, P.S.; Yu, Douglas W; Zhang, Ya-ping; Raven, Peter

Journal or Book Title: Science

Volume/Issue: 327

Page Number(s): 1457-1459

Year Published: 2010

Abstract:

China and India, the emerging economic giants of the world, will play a signifi cant, perhaps a dominant, role
in shaping the environmental outcomes for our planet in the 21st century. Both countries are expected to maintain an 8 to 9% rate of economic growth over the next several years ( 1). Even when much of the world is experiencing a recession, China and India in 2009 are projected to achieve high Gross Domestic Product growth (China, 8.4%; India, 6.2%; world, –2.2%) ( 1). Development in China and India is fueled not only by the natural capital within the countries, but also increasingly by imports of raw materials, particularly from  southeast Asia. Both nations import ~9 million tons of crude palm oil annually—almost one-quarter of global production—mostly from Malaysia and Indonesia ( 2). The degree to which China and India consume natural resources within their boundaries, and beyond, will largely determine future environmental, social, and economic outcomes. The two countries have been engaged in a border dispute that included a bitter, but  brief, war in 1962. We propose that much more earnest cooperation between the world’s two most populous  countries will be vital for mitigating biodiversity loss, global warming, and deforestation.

Type of Publication: Journal Article

Publisher: AAAS

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