Archive for December, 2009

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Mr Premier, are you ready?

climate: maybe it doesn't matter after all

climate: maybe it doesn't matter after all

U.S. president Barack Obama ran into a Chinese Wall of resistance and and delaying tactics, writes Austria’s online service OE24. The president had to get into China’s chief state councillor’s conference room after Wen Jiabao was reportedly overdue for a meeting, calling (in an ice-cold voice): “Mr. Premier, are you ready to see me? Are you ready?”

Plus “It’s up to you”, according to OE24. According to Germany’s biggest tabloid Bild he sort of joined Wen and India’s, South Africa’s and Brazil’s heads of government or state after Wen had stood him up at an appointment earlier, and only sent a lower-ranking official to talk with the American president.

Many Chinese observers may like the show – if this is really how it went. But Obama apparently returned to Washington pretty much at ease: He had shown good will, without committing himself. And the electorate at home is much more interested in health reform and the economy, than in global warming, writes Der Spiegel. Many Americans don’t believe in a link between global warming and carbon-dioxide emissions anyway.

Pretty much the same as in China, probably.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Press Review: Another visit by Chen Yunlin

Shamelessly biased of course, this piece from Taichung, Taiwan offers some useful background information to the agenda of another visit to Taiwan by China’s Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait (ARATS) chief negotiator Chen Yunlin (陈云林). Chen is scheduled to arrive in Taiwan for a three-day visit on Monday.

Meantime, the DPP’s secretary-general has advised Chen not to travel around on Taiwan, to avoid giving the impression of “conducting an inspection,” which could be provocative.

EastSouthWestNorth has some polling data about how the Taiwanese public views the Economic Cooperative Framework Agreement (ECFA), the core of the negotiations between Taiwan’s not-quite-official negotiators and their not-quite-official-either Chinese counterparts (neither government recognizes the other).

“Pacts” on fishing crew cooperation, agricultural quarantine inspection, industrial product standards, inspection and certification, and the avoidance of double taxation are among the topics for the upcoming round of negotiations, reports the China Post.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Net Nanny: Internet needs Rule

Comrades and Underlings,

Net Nanny: An absolute NO on China Daily

Net Nanny: An absolute NO on China Daily

when children approach their parents, or when the tributaries of the world approach their Middle Kingdom Emperor (or his viceroy overseas), they should ketou, or at least they should keep their hands clasped.

By no means should they spread their hands or fingers – this looks very vulgar. And if such things really happen, at least they shouldn’t be shown on the internet, because it only helps to spread the vulgar behavior. Photos showing barbarian manners like the one underneath my complimentary close should be completely out.

We must think of the internet as a transportation net, also in terms of manners. We need regulations to rule  it.

Thank you for your attention.
Net Nanny

a vulgar breach of protocol

a vulgar breach of protocol

____________

Related:

“Real Action”, China Daily, Dec 19, 2009

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Winter

Who says there won’t be a white christmas anymore? Snow is falling, has been falling since yesterday morning. It had started on the coast some twenty-four hours earlier, and then started moving here, too. If my personal wishing list had counted, it would have started on Wednesday – that’s when the holidays begin. I’m realizing that I’m getting older as I’m not simply taking pleasure in the romantic countryside, but rather thinking of the logistical challenges behind it. Besides, snow spoils the chance that we may go ice-skating on the long canals, from town to town, even if the freeze continues. You can’t sweep the snow kilometer after kilometer.

It’s only some five degrees C. below freezing point, but humid and frequently foggy at the same time, pretty much like on this photo.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Copenhagen Summit: Make it, or Fuck it Up, but Stop Bitching

The UN Climate summit in Copenhagen isn’t over yet, and it’s too early to call it a failure. Then again, it’s probably also too late to turn it into a real success. That may have to wait until next year – and why not. Even no deal at all would still be better than a lousy one. Not only the poorest and the developing countries can walk out. So can the OECD countries, and in certain situations, our negotiators should. In the end, we in the so-called developed world, won’t be those to be first and worst affected if climate change should lead to a dramatic increase in natural disasters. Never join negotiations without the preparedness to walk out again. That much for the basics of negotiations. But before walking out, one has to do ones best to contribute to a success. And above all, we – negotiators or spectators – shouldn’t bitch around.

Next to the “poor countries”, there is a block of developing countries which have come a long way during the recent years or decades: Brazil, China, and India. South Africa joined their climate faction. During a preparatory meeting in Beijing on November 28, the four governments agreed on The Four Non-Negotiables.

Refusing even to discuss legally binding emission cuts or (unsupported?) international measurement isn’t a promising approach. But then, if international measurement and arbitration is wanted, who should carry it out? I haven’t heard OECD countries spelling out their suggestions yet – and I don’t believe that international arbitration will necessarily be accurate either. The UN Human Rights Council is no encouraging sample for such arbitration anyway.

Anyway, The Atlantic has words of praise for the American delegation:

At a press conference on Wednesday, I asked China’s chief climate negotiator Su Wei if it were possible for China and the United States to reach an accommodation on the verification issue. He responded with a long—a very long—answer. He started by accusing developed nations of trying to “evade their historic responsibilities with various excuses [and] the fundamental excuse is that [China and other emerging developing countries] have not taken steps to address climate change.” Su, however, contended that China’s energy efficiency efforts “have broken their lies.” He declared that China “always followed a principle of openness and transparency.” And then he asserted: “I don’t see the necessity of others to worry about the sincerity of China’s efforts to address climate change.” In other words, get lost.

In other words: bad China!

On the other hand, there is a force for good, of course. Also from The Atlantic:

Then came Hillary. On Thursday morning, moments after the African nations complained that the negotiations were going nowhere, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appeared in a crowded press briefing room at the summit and announced that the United States would contribute to a $100 billion international fund starting in 2020—as long as “all major nations” commit their emissions reductions to a binding agreement and submit those reductions to transparent verification. And by “all major nations,” she meant China.

Cool. The U.S. Defense Department’s base budget for 2009 alone was at US-$ 515.4 billion this year. And, mind you, Hillary Clinton‘s pledge didn’t stem from funding the U.S. would contribute on its own: America would only contribute to the amount.

In my books, the Obama administration has taken a constructive approach. I don’t expect it to play Papa Christmas in Copenhagen. But I’m not exactly in awe of the U.S. negotiating line yet either. And when looking at the constraints on the American federal government – not from the global community, but from home -, it doesn’t make America look better either. It only explains why even a pretty good-willed U.S. administration can’t do better than it is doing.

But that doesn’t really disturb or anger me. Lobbying – from either side – is tough business, and to make the right arguments win takes time. What pisses me off is some of the coverage here in Europe, in the United States, or by a number of Westerners around the globe who are singling China out as the usual suspect when something is going wrong. I’m not panda-hugger. That’s exactly why I find it disturbing when some mainstream media (and blogs)  from the West become as predictable in their findings and comments as the China Global Times or other CCP mouthpieces – only from the opposite direction.

Take this piece from the Christian Science Monitor (quoted by Stuart on his blog  Found in China here):

The world will hardly know if global warming is being curbed if the largest emitter of carbon – China – isn’t releasing accurate data about its pollution.
That’s why it was correct for the United States to insist Thursday at the climate-change talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, that Beijing must be transparent about any claims of success in reducing greenhouse gases.
Without outside verification of carbon cuts in big polluting nations such as China and India, the US Senate is unlikely to pass a tough bill that would force Americans to reduce their consumption of fossil fuels.
And any international pact that sets hard targets for emissions reduction will mean nothing if there are suspicions of cheating or if some countries don’t pull their own weight.
The problem in China is that the ruling Communist Party has a long history of issuing false or at least unreliable data about its economy – as do many one-party regimes driven by ideology and that are often rife with corruption. Lower-level officials often cook official reports – or “add water,” as the Chinese say – to meet quotas set by Beijing or to protect their turf.

Stupid me! It’s China’s dictatorship! And I thought it was lobbyism which kept the U.S. Senate from moving!

I have no clear-cut opinion as to how far we should wait for China or India to commit themselves before becoming more dedicated ourselves. And I don’t need to. After all, I’m only a spectator. I can form my opinion once the stuff is completed either way, and in substance, I can understand misgivings like the ones voiced by the Christian Science Monitor. But my opinion is clear on one matter: it’s too early to single China out as a saboteur. And it is too early to act like if our countries, the OECD members, were saints in this matter.

But that’s how a number of op-eds, comments, and posts, are coming across. If I were a Chinese national, I would find the case they are making about as attractive as a post-religious sunday school, which is to say, as uncool as athlete’s foot.  If we want to make a case, we should stop preaching. Dogmas are the opposites good points. Yes, China or India may add water to meet quotas set by Beijing or to protect their turf. China or India may also simply refuse to commit themselves to any goals if we insist on whatever kind of international control. And in that case we will have to think about the best strategies that would remain: continuing to negotiate closer to their terms, or walking out ourselves.

The latter doesn’t necessarily look like the worst choice to me – it would open the door for other choices: going it alone – developing technologies to do our share in carbon dioxide reduction and becoming global market leaders in that technology, for example. It will be badly needed very soon.

We may, in such a case, have to rethink not only our individual ways of life (that’s inevitable anyway), but also where we should buy from. It would make no sense to have our daily needs produced where they cause the most carbon dioxide. In many ways, the ball will simply be in our court, not in China’s or India’s.

Many of our countries can also use controlled immigration – OECD countries, as a rule, are greying societies. Many people around the globe will need a new home if the United Nations work for climate control fails, and it’s OK to be choosy in choosing the right migrants, if we should be in that position.

And if our governments then  succeed in convincing the world that China and India could have done much better than they have (or will have), so much the better. As far as that’s concerned, Mrs Clinton has shown great – and perfectly legitimate – skills in Copenhagen already.

For one, she wasn’t bitching.

____________

Related:

Climate Change Control: Who should Foot the Bill, December 15, 2009

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

A Fair Trial, according to the Relevant Laws

If you are looking for a seasonal piece of prose you can read to your loved ones on one of these comfy winter evenings in the northern hemisphere, why not choosing A Fair Trial. That stuff is of course an entirely biased, unfair, and inaccurate account of what really happened, because the fat bad boys and girls, in reality, came from a country which bought too much and had too big a navy to allow for a really fair trial as described by MyLaowai. But if the lad on trial there had been a Chinese national with not-too-much guanxi, he might have gotten a fair trial according to the relevant laws.

So before you start finger-pointing and interfering in China’s internal affairs again, remember that an entirely fair and harmonious judicial system can’t be built in a day.

____________

Related:
The Stupid Little Mermaid, March 12, 2009

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Climate Change Control: Who should Foot the Bill?

The worst thing that can happen to the Copenhagen summit would be a blame game, based on different ideological concepts. I thought I wouldn’t start a discussion about it yet, but I joined one on another blog. So if you want to know JR’s temporary unconsolidated findings and those of others on who should or might foot which share of the bill for climate change control, you might take a look at the commenter thread there.

____________

Related
China and one of its biggest threats team up for Copenhagen, Dec 12, 2009

Monday, December 14, 2009

Steiff Stuffed Animals: Closer to Home

Steiff GmbH is reportedly phasing out production in China after six years. Back then, the dapper company had created a cheap brand, Cosy Friends.

One reason to cease the China engagement was quality. The Financial Times Deutschland quotes the company’s executive director as saying that the company had underestimated their own strength: producing a stuffed animal isn’t that easy after all. A strong fluctuation of employees at Steiff’s Chinese contractual partner didn’t help either. It took a seamstress eight to twelve months to meet the standards – but hardly any of them stayed that long. Which made the executive director worry that they might join competing companies.

This doesn’t mean that much of the production that went away years ago will be relocated to Germany. Steiff is expanding its production in Portugal, but particularly in Tunisia. It takes people no shorter there to meet the quality requirements. But the Tunisian employees are unlikely to move to a competitor overnight. Sidi Bouzid, the production site, is far away from the rest of the world, in Tunisia’s hinterland.

Implementing new projects across the Mediterranean is also easier, than communicating across most of Asia. And new products, once they have been made in Portugal or Tunesia, reach their markets much more quickly.

It’s for similar reasons that athletic shoes for the United States’ markets in the 1990s were – or maybe still are – made in Mexico to quite an extent. That said, the really functional (and often more expensive) shoes mostly came from the Far East. As they weren’t subject to frequent, even minor, fashion changes, production processes could go on unchanged for long periods – long enough to produce quantities which would justify the time it took to meet the quality standards of American headquarters. Contrary to stuffed animals, runners are usually no collector’s items.

____________

Related:
Every Fifth German Company Leaving China, August 4, 2008

Update/Related:
“China is increasingly losing attraction”, The Telegraph, July 3, 2008

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.