Open Access
Risk forewarning of regional development sustainability based on a natural resources and environmental carrying index in China
Author(s) -
Fan Jie,
Wang Yafei,
Ouyang Zhiyun,
Li Lijuan,
Xu Yong,
Zhang Wenzhong,
Wang Chuansheng,
Xu Weihua,
Li Jiuyi,
Yu Jianhui,
Zhou Kan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
earth's future
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.641
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2328-4277
DOI - 10.1002/2016ef000490
Subject(s) - urbanization , industrialisation , sustainability , natural resource , natural resource economics , sustainable development , mainland china , population , environmental planning , china , business , population growth , environmental resource management , environmental protection , geography , economic growth , environmental science , economics , ecology , environmental health , medicine , archaeology , market economy , biology
Abstract It is a matter of public consensus that China's high growth rate has been achieved at the expense of natural resources and the environment, leading to serious risks to sustainability. This research, which proposes a theoretical model to forewarn of risks to regional developmental sustainability in China, constitutes the first empirical evaluation of this to be undertaken there. The results show that: (a) the areas at risk cover almost 43% of the land and 44% of the population of mainland China. In those areas, 83.56% of people at risk are threatened by the low carrying capacity of the environment and limited water resources. (b) With 70% of the total population living in “at risk” areas, urbanization zones remain as the primary category suffering from overload across China. Extensive industrialization has resulted in environmental pollution, which contributes the most to the forewarning status, while the secondary cause is found to be the special coupling of the scarcity of natural water resources and their inefficient use. In addition, most urban conglomerations suffer from pollution by industrial production and household consumption, which tends to extend to their surrounding agricultural areas. Extensive mineral exploitation in ecologically fragile areas has made them increasingly more vulnerable to disturbances from their neighboring resource‐driven urban areas. The paper uses these findings to suggest how to intensify the special regulatory administration of resources and the environment, and to transform approaches to industrialization, in order to address sustainable development issues in developing countries.