As you well know, a lot of things are made in China, mostly because the cost of producing thing is much lower there than elsewhere. Recently the country has seen a boom in renewable energy manufacturing, however a recently released report shows that almost all of China’s renewable energy manufacturing businesses are breaking World Trade Organization laws — adopted and followed by most countries — by receiving giant government subsidies and dirt cheap land while still exporting the majority of their goods.
Related Posts
-
It’s a familiar refrain: renewable energy won’t look as enticing after government subsidies are removed. While renewable energy does get government incentives, it turns out
-
Mexico is poised to become the second nation in the world (behind Great Britain) to pass sweeping climate change legislation that calls for dramatically reducing
-
A new study shows that between 1992 and 2007 emissions in China nearly tripled. The study explores not only the emissions but their causes and
One Response to “China’s Green Energy Businesses are Breaking International Law”
-
Featured Author
-
Read Inhabitat
-
Search Categories
-
Recent Posts
-
Recent Comments
-
Browse by Keyword
follow inhabitat on:
popular today
all time
most commented
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
© Inhabitat.com 2012 | About Inhabitat | Contact Us | Advertising with Inhabitat | Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Inhabitat, LLC
























Does anyone really expect china to “obey” the same international rules that {inhibit} green! Get real… Now that give us a right to demand something a little mightier than a silly “law”, that is:
The ONLY way to beat China is to aggressively fund ROBOTIC PV development. China, uses cheap human labor (and some automated assembly). We need to make TENS OF THOUSANDS OF SQUARE MILES (of solar PV {to do any good}) really dirt cheap, by using robotic “slave labor”. The resulting install jobs would do wonders for the economy.