this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2025
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We could all hope that China would lead the world in climate change as the country is the world's biggest polluter (with coal consumption still on the rise as I wrote just in another thread).
However, China's is far away of any leadership when it comes to reduce carbon emission.
The scientists from the Climate Actions Tracker call China's recent announcement to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 7% to 10% by 2035 as 'disappointing' as China - given the country's size and economy - would need to cut emissions by around 30% for the world to be on track to the Paris goal.
According to the scientists, no country is on track to Paris, but while the EU and Brazil's climate actions are insufficient, China and India's are considered highly insufficient.
So it doesn't look like leadership.
Would Europe and North America stop buying from China and Brazil because of emissions? I bet not. It's not just China's and Brazil's responsability because a huge share of their emissions are to meet demand of the exports to Europe and North America.
@jol @Sepia it's also crazy to call out the one nation that has flat lined their CO2 emissions for the last 18 months and whose renewable exports have actually dropped emissions in developing countries. We need overproduction of renewables.
@Jason Kraus
This is misleading and incomplete information that makes it outright false.
China is set to miss its target to cut carbon intensity – the CO2 emissions per unit of GDP – from 2020 to 2025. The country would need steeper reductions to hit the it’s 2030 goal.
Emissions from the production of cement and other building materials indeed fell by 7% in the third quarter of 2025, while emissions from the metals industry fell 1%. This is due, however, not to environmental policy in Beijing, but rather to the ongoing real-estate crisis, as the construction sector uses most of the country’s steel and cement output.
Power-sector emissions were also flat year-on-year in Q3/2025, with emissions from transport fell by 5%, but oil consumption in other sectors grew by 10%, driven by chemical industry expansion. This resulted in a 2% rise in oil consumption overall. Gas demand and emissions grew by 3% overall in Q3, with consumption in the power sector up by 9% and by 2% in other sectors.