Asia has a big problem with its environmental impact on our world. Whilst many countries in the West are doing their bit to reduce their climate footprint through various green initiatives, it can still feel rather one-sided when many Asian companies seemingly carry on regardless, with environmental concerns hardly their first priority.
This fascinating book takes a highly focussed look at environmental issues in Asia and considers how the next possible business boom – ecological considerations in the region – may be handled. The author considers what China, India, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, South Korea, Singapore and Thailand are doing to build businesses that will lessen the environmental impact of Asia’s extraordinary economic growth. The West has been happy to have this region as its low-cost workshop, yet profit and possibly ignorance has got in the way.
Many governments are now trying to stem the tide of poor air quality, dirty water and overcrowding and address the business and social problems that they cause head on. It is not going to be an overnight fix, yet the author contends that steps are being taken in the right direction. It requires more than just a government decree. Entire business models need to be changed. Individual attitudes must be modified and yes, in part, the West must also shoulder some responsibility.
The book is clearly written with an academically focussed audience in mind, yet the publisher has priced this book so that even the interested generalist can afford it. It is a book that is capable of giving so much, dependent on its intended audience.
We may be forgiven for thinking we know “all” about the problems in Asia, yet in reality we are probably mostly ignorant. Imagine a village with no electricity, running water and more importantly no litter, the latter being due to its inhabitants being so poor that they can’t afford to leave anything to waste. Things are not necessarily much better in “first world” countries such as Singapore. Poor air quality and the weather does not respect sovereign territory and income, so Singaporeans were surprised and alarmed in 2013 to see their clean city blanketed by choking haze from fires in neighbouring Indonesia. This is not an isolated case.
The author notes that Asia is the greatest economic success story in human history and this is capable of leading change, even though the economic expansion is putting extraordinary and often unsustainable pressures on the natural environment. So positive change is inevitable, even though there will be a lot of change to push through and a lot of cleaning up being necessary afterwards.
However there is still a mass of contrasts that can feel hard to fathom. As the author notes, “The Asian Development Bank says that 628 million people in Asia are still without electricity; this means that even in the countries participating in the world’s great economic success story, one out of every five people is still living in a house without even a single electric light bulb. As the poor continue to rise out of poverty and as the population as a whole continues to grow, there will be an extraordinary strain on resources — water, food, fuel — and there is likely to be an increase in carbon emissions as well.”
So it is definitely in the interests of the countries not to kill the goose that lays golden eggs. Wise businesses are alert to these necessary changes and can be ideally placed to benefit from the inevitable.
It might not be too far-fetched to say that even if you have no business interests in this region, you still should be interested enough to read about what is happening here. After all, it has the potential to affect our entire world!
The Greening of Asia, written by Mark L. Clifford and published by Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231166089, 320 pages. YYYYY