China Is Winning Green Tech. The West Is Misreading Why.
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The Green Contest Nobody Called a Contest
China is the world’s largest carbon emitter. It is also the world’s largest producer of solar panels, electric vehicles, and battery storage. Those facts are not in contradiction. From a Chinese cultural and political perspective, they are entirely consistent.
The article under discussion, A Green World Order with Chinese Characteristics, makes the structure visible. Climate action has drifted from shared mission into a contest over green technology dominance and global influence. China is not in the green transition as a liberal environmentalist.
It is in it as a long-term strategic actor whose national development goals happen, at this moment, to align with low-carbon technology leadership.
Western climate frameworks have not accounted for that distinction. Paul Gladston argues the reason is cultural, and that the tools to address it are largely absent from commercial and policy analysis.
Pocket Money on Art Books, Then Thirty Years in the Sinosphere
Paul came to Chinese culture through art, and to art through remainder bookshops as a child in Britain.
“I used to spend my pocket money on art books,” he said.
When the University of Nottingham invited him to help establish its campus in Ningbo in 2005, he agreed on one condition: he wanted to pursue research. What was planned as two articles became eleven books. He is now the Judith Nielsen Chair Professor of Contemporary Art at the University of New South Wales Sydney. His work sits at the boundary between Western and Chinese-speaking cultural frameworks. That boundary, he argues, is precisely where climate analysis keeps failing.
The Variable the Article Leaves Out
The article is, Paul says, “typical of academic discourse.” Socio-economic and political analysis. Valuable, but incomplete.
“I often think that in order to decode some aspects of that discussion and give a richer view of that, one has to address culture. Leaving it out rather limits the discussion.”
The cultural variable is not soft context. It concerns what international commitment actually means to different parties, what timescales legitimate decision-making operates on, and what the relationship between state, society, and national interest looks like from inside a different tradition.
Confucian Pragmatism and the Long Game
China’s climate engagement, Paul argues, is shaped by a specific cultural inheritance. Confucianism was always a pragmatic idealism. It rejected the legalist view that human nature was bad and required punishment, and instead believed in the perfectibility of the individual and of society. Progress required pragmatism, not purity.
Since the 1990s, the Chinese Communist Party has incorporated its own version of that tradition, including appeals to social harmony, as a framework for managing forty years of rapid and disruptive transformation. The result is a governing culture with a long-term orientation and a willingness to pursue steps that look inconsistent with the stated goal, if those steps serve the broader trajectory.
“It’s an acceptance from a Chinese perspective that we might have to do certain things that are at odds with the ultimate outcome that we’re trying to achieve. But we have a long-term view and we’ll do whatever it takes to get there.”
From a Western liberal perspective, that looks like bad faith. From inside the framework, it is rational.
Two Frameworks at the Same Negotiating Table
Western climate frameworks assume shared liberal values: transparency, democratic accountability, and international obligation as binding regardless of domestic politics. Those assumptions are not universal.
Paul is careful here. “We should not simply dress China up as some perfect exemplar of how to develop a green society.”
His point is not that China’s approach is superior. It is that the global climate debate “remains westernised.” The cultural frameworks of other major actors are not adequately represented in how cooperation is designed or evaluated.
The Missing Instrument
Paul’s magic wand is a cultural one. More people, in commercial and policy life, capable of sophisticated transcultural interpretation. Not relativism. Rigorous, informed reading of how different societies understand commitment, progress, and long-term action.
“What ought to change is to have more people that can give a sophisticated interpretation of issues that draw on culture, and particularly transcultural issues.”
The green world order is being constructed now. The cultural literacy required to build it on shared rather than assumed foundations is, for the moment, in short supply.
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