´óÏó´«Ã½

This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

Last updated at 17:46 BST, Wednesday, 21 July 2010

China now world's biggest energy user

Summary

23 July 2010

China has passed the United States to become the world's biggest energy user, according to the International Energy Agency. However, Chinese officials say that the IEA's data are unreliable.

Reporter
Andrew Walker

Chinese power plant

Demand for power is rising in China

Listen

Click to hear the report

Report

China was bound to overtake the US in terms of total energy consumption sooner or later, and according to IEA calculations, it happened in 2009.

One long-term factor behind this development is China's population – more than four times that of the US – with a growing appetite for consumer goods that need energy to use and to manufacture.

The other key reason is China's rapid economic growth, an annual average of 10% over the last two decades, compared with a much slower 2.6% in the United States. Much of China's economic growth has been in industry and construction, which are big energy users.

The timing of China overtaking the US also reflects the global financial crisis, which hit the American economy much harder and so had a bigger impact on the country's energy use.

China's new lead in energy consumption is yet another indicator of its growing influence in the global economy especially in international energy markets.

But while China's total energy consumption has, according to the IEA, overtaken the US, it's still far behind in terms of energy use per person, by a factor of more than three. Chinese officials have said the IEA's data are unreliable, and fail to account for what they call their relentless efforts to cut energy use and emissions.

The response probably reflects China's sensitivity to criticism of its growing global influence. But the IEA's analysis is not a criticism. A senior official at the agency described China's growing energy consumption as legitimate, considering its population.

Andrew Walker, ´óÏó´«Ã½ News, London

Listen

Click to hear the vocabulary:

Vocabulary

was bound to

was very likely to

overtake

catch up with and move past something that is moving more slowly

consumer goods

new items bought mainly for use in the home

a bigger impact

more influence

indicator

sign of a changing situation

unreliable

not accurate or trustworthy

relentless efforts

constant attempts

emissions

substances released into the air, usually pollutants

sensitivity

easily offended reaction

legitimate

fair and reasonable

Downloads

To take away:

Latest reports

Local Navigation

  1. Home
  2. >ÌýGrammar, Vocabulary & Pronunciation
  3. >ÌýWords in the News
  4. >ÌýChina now world's biggest energy user