9-18. China has passed the United States as the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, which displeases environmentalists

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9-18. China has passed the United States as the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, which displeases environmentalists concerned about global climate change. China has subsidized its green energy manufacturers, allowing them to dominate key industries, such as solar panels, which displeases advocates of free trade. What would you recommend China do? Should it accommodate its critics? Should it ignore them? The trauma of the Global Recession of 2008–2009 motivated politicians around the world to seek new ways of rejuvenating their struggling economies. Many of them focused on the promotion of green energy as a critical element of their economic recovery programs.

(Green energy encompasses power generated by sustainable, renewable sources, such as solar, wind, waves and tide, geothermal deposits, biomass, and low-

impact hydroelectric power.) In 2008, then presidential candidate Barack Obama proposed a “New Energy for America”

initiative, which sought to invest $150 billion over 10 years to promote clean energy, reduce dependence on foreign oil, lower greenhouse gas emissions, and create five million new jobs. By stimulating new green energy technologies, candidate Obama believed that the United States would become a dominant exporter in the green energy markets of the future. During his 2010 election campaign, British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged to create a £20 billion green homes program. German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced her Nine-

Point Program designed to increase over a 40-

year period the role of renewable sources in generating Germany’s electricity.

For 2020, Merkel established a goal of having renewable sources provide 35 percent of Germany’s electricity needs. The Canadian province of Ontario’s Green Energy and Green Economy Act of 2009 promised to stimulate green energy production and to increase energy efficiency. Similar green energy programs were announced by the governments of China (with a price tag of $220 billion), South Korea ($60 billion), and Japan

($35 billion).

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International Business A Managerial Perspective

ISBN: 9781292018218

8th Global Edition

Authors: Ricky W. Griffin, Michael Pustay

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