Meanwhile, the US gets away with merely “insufficient”, and the UK is apparently “almost sufficient”?

At least Canada is also “highly insufficient”, which yeah, as a Canadian, I couldn’t agree more.

Also, without delving into their methodology, something tells me that the biggest reason for these results is that they’re not considering or not sufficiently weighing population size/density or the fact that countries trade goods and services with each other (for example, the majority of China’s manufacturing is done exclusively for the West, so shouldn’t the carbon footprint of those be apart of the West and not China?) Just a hunch, but if true, it essentially invalidates their entire dataset because, get this, the world is not magically divided into discrete countries as far as the climate/environment is concerned!

  • BANNED
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    112 years ago

    30% of china’s energy comes from nuclear and renewable sources whereas the U.S is only 21%. Liberals seething coping and shidding to make a country of a population 1.4B compared to a country of 333M