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China’s Emissions: More Than U.S. Plus Europe, and Still Rising

The Wujing Coal-Electricity Power Station in Shanghai in 2017. China’s electricity consumption jumped 6.6 percent last year. Wind and solar energy grew quickly, but not nearly enough to meet the extra demand.Credit...Johannes Eisele/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

DAVOS, Switzerland — Xi Jinping, China’s president, galvanized supporters of the climate-change fight last year when he told an audience at the World Economic Forum that the effort “is a responsibility we must assume for future generations.”

This week, as they gather again in Davos for the annual global gabfest, world leaders continue to see China as a major force in that fight. Yet new figures show a complicating development: China’s emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases may be rising again.

China — which already emits more carbon from burning fossil fuels than the United States and Europe combined — saw electricity use jump last year as its economy accelerated. Much of the extra demand was met by burning more coal, a particularly dirty fuel. Oil use has also risen as China has become the world’s largest car market, and so has natural gas consumption.

Experts say one annual increase doesn’t indicate China is returning to an era when its emissions grew by leaps and bounds. But the increase illustrates the challenges and compromises Beijing must juggle if it wants to stoke its economy and at the same time keep its environmental promises.

China has pressed ahead with longer-term efforts to get its economy to burn more cleanly. Last month it announced plans to set up a national carbon trading market. It has also begun a long and sometimes painful process to encourage use of natural gas.

Those efforts won praise on Wednesday from Prime Minister Erna Solberg of Norway, who said in an interview that China’s plans for a carbon market would help its economy grow and protect people’s livelihoods at the same time. “We have to decouple energy use and CO2 emissions from economic growth,” she said.

What happens in China has a crucial effect on global emissions. China produces more than a quarter of humanity’s emissions of global warming gases.

Officials in Davos said they saw little indication that China’s influence in the climate change effort was ebbing.

India, for example, is considering whether to follow the United States in putting tariffs on solar panel imports to help its own industry, or whether to bow to the dominance of China, by far the largest maker and buyer of solar panels. China also dominates the business of making wind turbines and is focused on becoming a force in electric cars.

“We are trying to promote our manufacturers, but they also have to compete with international manufacturers,” said Ramesh Abhishek, India’s secretary of industrial policy and promotion.

The stakes are high. Peter O’Neill, the prime minister of Papua New Guinea, contended at the conference that a severe drought in his country could be attributed in part to climate change. “The world seems to think they have time, but there are real communities already suffering,” he said.

Falling Chinese emissions in 2015 and again in 2016 caused the entire world’s energy-related emissions to level off in those years. That gave some hope to climate scientists of progress in stabilizing humanity’s release of climate-changing gases into the atmosphere.

But China’s National Development and Reform Commission released detailed data this week showing that the country’s electricity consumption jumped 6.6 percent last year. Wind and solar energy grew quickly, but not nearly enough to meet the extra demand. Electricity generation from the burning of fossil fuels, almost entirely coal, rose 5.2 percent in China last year.

Yan Pengcheng, a spokesman for the agency, emphasized Monday at a news briefing in Beijing that China had expanded its use of clean energy. China’s generation of electricity by wind power climbed by about one-quarter last year, while solar power jumped by three-quarters, Mr. Yan said.

But the increases in wind and solar power both came from low bases.

Some scientists have been warning since autumn that China’s drop in carbon emissions in 2015 and 2016 might be reversed, and Monday’s data confirmed this.

“The increase last year is a one-off — it’s not likely to be sustained — but Chinese emissions are not likely to go down, either,” said Trevor Houser, a partner at the Rhodium Group, a New York consulting group specializing in China. Rhodium estimates that China’s energy-related carbon emissions climbed last year 2.2 percent to 4.1 percent.

By contrast, China had somewhat weak industrial production in the second half of 2015 and the first half of 2016 because of a financial crisis. That hurt the Chinese economy and fossil fuel consumption in both years. China still burns coal to generate three-quarters of its electricity.

While China’s official figures for economic output show that growth did not falter in 2015 and 2016, and that there was a slight uptick last year, Western economists are skeptical of Chinese economic statistics. They say China’s government statisticians appear to have understated the extent of the earlier slowdown.

Premier Li Keqiang himself has said before that electricity consumption statistics are more reliable in China, and something he watches more, than overall economic growth statistics.

“So the widely reported flattening of China’s emissions while economic growth continued apace was misleading,” said Robert Stavins, an energy economist at Harvard University. “Emissions had flattened because of the slowed economy.”

Mr. Stavins said that despite the uptick he remained optimistic about China’s ability to downshift its emissions trajectory permanently.

As part of the Paris agreement on climate change, China pledged that its emissions would peak no later than 2030, and Mr. Stavins said that target “remains very much within reach.”

China has also said it will make its economy much more efficient than it was in 2005 in terms of how much carbon it emits per unit of growth.

It is too soon for experts to declare definitively that all human-caused emissions of global warming gases increased last year, as most countries have not yet released enough data.

Chinese officials have long pointed out that while their country’s emissions may be high, that is mainly because China has a lot of people. Emissions per person were only slightly higher in China in 2016 than in the European Union, and were lower than in the United States.

Data from sources of human-caused greenhouse gases in China other than fossil fuels, such as from agriculture, won’t be available for several months, but those emissions are smaller.

The backdrop for climate change worries here came in the form of snow drifts left by a blizzard that dumped more than six feet of snow in a week.

Klaus Schwab, the executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, joked with Liu He, a Politburo member from China, which is hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics. “When you have the Olympic Games,” Mr. Schwab said, “maybe we can export some of the snow to your country.”

Follow Keith Bradsher and Lisa Friedman on Twitter: @KeithBradsher and @LFFriedman.

Keith Bradsher reported from Davos, and Lisa Friedman from Washington. Ailin Tang contributed research.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 11 of the New York edition with the headline: Forum Lauds Climate Efforts by China Even as Its Emissions Climb. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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