China expands pollution footprint

China expands pollution footprint

Photo: Xinhua – Pan Yulong – AFP

 

Instead of honoring the “green promise” it made at the United Nations on September 22, 2020, to become a zero-emission economy, China has been increasing its pollution levels.

By Diálogo – Digital Military Magazine – Julieta Pelcastre

Sep 17, 2021

The China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) is preparing to restart operations in Venezuela as soon as the Nicolás Maduro regime approves energy legislation that will give its international partners more control over operations, Bloomberg reported on September 2, 2021.





According to Bloomberg, the Chinese oil company has been sending engineers and commercial personnel to inspect local companies and to work in a facility that operates with Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA) to boost crude production at five other companies in the Orinoco oil area.

“To say that the China National Petroleum Corporation will be in Venezuela again is an important decision. It will reactivate the entire process of coordination with China to exploit Venezuelan crude,” said Venezuelan lawmaker Ángel Rodríguez, president of the National Assembly’s Energy and Petroleum Commission, the Costa Rican newspaper El País reported on September 10.

CNCP is PetroChina’s state-owned parent company, and it is the largest oil and gas company on the planet in terms of income, the World Energy Trade website reported on April 2. PetroChina is one of 20 fossil fuel companies responsible for 35 percent of the world’s polluting methane and carbon dioxide emissions, the British newspaper The Guardian says.

“China has at least nine ongoing projects to add new refining capacity or build new refineries over the next five years,” while trends in Europe and the United States point toward shutting down plants or transforming complexes into petrochemical and biofuel production facilities, the Mexican magazine Expansión reported.

Exodus

Bloomberg says that Venezuela, with the largest crude oil reserves worldwide, experienced a drop in production when its international partners withdrew. The current 500,000 barrels per day production is one-sixth of the 2008 peak production.

Due to this exodus, Maduro has drafted an energy law to attract more foreign capital, something increasingly difficult with new concerns about reducing methane emissions, which global oil companies have moved to the top of their agendas, the British energy news portal Oil Price reported on September 2, 2021.

“Chinese-backed projects on several continents have displaced local populations, negatively affected water quality, polluted adjacent land, and spoiled fragile ecosystems,” the U.S. Department of State’s website ShareAmerica reported.

Read More: Diálogo – Digital Military Magazine – China expands pollution footprint

La Patilla in English