Professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Peking University. Founding Director: Communications Association of China. Source World Economic Forum, Fair Use, Low Resolution Image to Identify the Subject.

Chinese Professor Demands Politicians Shut Down Rich Country High Carbon Industries

Essay by Eric Worrall

“… If industries resist, strict regulations may be required to enforce change or even force noncompliant companies to shut shop. …”

Time to fix responsibility for climate change

By Hu Yong | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2026-01-26 06:43

MA XUEJING/CHINA DAILY 

Global warming is one of the biggest challenges faced by humanity today. As emissions continue to rise, global temperatures keep breaking records and the world’s poorest nations bear the brunt of a crisis they did little to create.

However, public discourse on climate responsibility remains mired in individualism. Citizens are told to recycle, go vegan and shrink their “carbon footprints” while systemic sources of emissions — from industrial production to state-backed fossil fuel subsidies — remain largely untouched. It is time the global conversation shifts from personal virtue to structural accountability, from lifestyle tweaks to large-scale political and economic reform.

Carbon emissions are linked to economic activity. Data show that 63 percent of emissions come from poor or developing countries, countries where the people are not rich, but are trying to achieve a middle-class lifestyle. In order to become middle or upper-class, lower income countries are forced to emit. Urging a developing country to cut back is an attempt to constrain its development, especially when today’s rich countries emitted freely on their way to prosperity.

Politicians must understand that addressing climate change can be a decisive factor in their political success or failure. They need to tackle climate change substantively — not through symbolic actions like banning plastic straws, but by addressing the largest sources of emissions, such as coal and oil. Policy measures, including support to green technologies and investing heavily in innovations, would help. If industries resist, strict regulations may be required to enforce change or even force noncompliant companies to shut shop. With adequate funding, this strategy could disrupt the existing cycle and help lower prices.

Read more: https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202601/26/WS69769cb4a310d6866eb359f5.html

Developing countries like China get a free pass because they “are forced to emit”. But rich country politicians “must understand that addressing climate change can be a decisive factor in their political success or failure”.

The absurdity of this thinking is if CO2 was a problem, it wouldn’t matter whether the CO2 was emitted by rich countries or poor countries. It’s like Professor Hu Yong is demanding a free pass for developing countries to wreck the planet, while developed countries cut back to give them space. If the world truly had exhausted its carbon budget, everyone would have to cut back on emissions, developed or not.

Thankfully CO2 is not a problem. By every reasonable measure the global climate is improving, thanks to CO2 fertilisation. The world is becoming more benign for plant life, more able to sustain food production and create prosperity for Earth’s billions of people.

Even better, vast tracts of land which were too cold to farm are becoming arable, with far more to come if warming continues.

Global warming is no threat to survival. We should be emitting as much CO2 as possible, building a buffer against the ongoing Late Cenzoic Ice Age which still has the world in its grip, not panicking over every ounce of emitted CO2. Global cooling is what we should fear.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
5 18 votes
Article Rating
71 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
2hotel9
January 27, 2026 9:01 am

Journalism and communication. So not a real professor, just another trained parrot spewing the talking points the hand shoved up his colon signs to him. Got it.

January 27, 2026 9:08 am

Stupid is as stupid does.

Richard Rude
January 27, 2026 9:47 am

My greenhouse plants love a hit of CO2

MrGrimNasty
January 27, 2026 12:10 pm

Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake – unless it is to offer encouragement to keep going.

Bob
January 27, 2026 1:18 pm

Yet another example of an expert/professional/academic thinking they know more than the rest of us. They are really making it easy to put no stock in what they say.

KlimaSkeptic
January 27, 2026 5:13 pm

Fancy a Chinese professor demanding shutting down “…Rich Country High Carbon Industries” while China is building coal fired power stations like there is no tomorrow! And I do object the terms “High Carbon” and “Carbon emissions…”, which he is using. Carbon is a solid, so it can NOT be emitted, unlike CO2, which is a gas, and neither do industries create “High Carbon”.

Ed Zuiderwijk
January 28, 2026 2:06 am

Is HuYoung related to Gung Ho?

January 28, 2026 3:19 am

Hu Yong,
Put down the hashpipe and slowly take 3 steps back.

We are here to help…