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China's Energy and Resource Uses: Continuity and Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

Recent writings on China's achievements during the last quarter of the 20th century stress, almost without exception, the enormity of change. But, for both universal and particular reasons, this survey of the country's energy resources and uses will stress continuity as much as change. Taking the inertia of complex energy systems as the key universal given, the most important particular explanation lies in peculiarities of China's resource endowment.

Type
China's Environment
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1998

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References

1. A good example of this widespread genre is the latest World Bank review of the Chinese economy: The World Bank, China 2020: The Development Challenges in the New Century (Washington, DC: The World Bank, 1997).Google Scholar

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4. A resource category comprises the total mass of a particular commodity present in the earth's crust, regardless of technical means to recover it or the economic viability doing so. While total resources can only be estimated, reserves are the accurately known fraction of resources which can be recovered at a known cost using commercial techniques. A combination of technical innovation and higher prices constantly creates reserves out of resources.Google Scholar

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6. Mistakenly, this reserve/production (R/P) ratio is often taken as an indicator of the time when a country, or the world, will run out of a particular mineral. This would be the case only for the resource/production ratio, a quotient we cannot reliably calculate because of the uncertain nature of the numerator. Higher prices and better techniques can raise R/P ratios quite rapidly: for example, the global R/P ratio for crude oil was well below 30 during the time of low oil prices in the early 1970s – but recently it has risen above 40, higher than at any time since 1945. For the latest estimates of coal reserves, and coal R/P ratios see: British Petroleum, BP Statistical Review, p. 30.

7. Ibid.. p. 4.

8. Ibid.. p. 20.

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37. Ibid..

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58. For details on these programmes see: Smil, , Energy in China's Modernization, pp. 5469.Google Scholar