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The virtual water content of major grain crops and virtual water flows between regions in China
Author(s) -
Sun ShiKun,
Wu PuTe,
Wang YuBao,
Zhao XiNing
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/jsfa.5911
Subject(s) - virtual water , china , agricultural engineering , water content , environmental science , agronomy , geography , biology , water resources , water scarcity , geology , ecology , engineering , archaeology , geotechnical engineering
Background The disproportionate distribution of arable land and water resources has become a bottleneck for guaranteeing food security in China. Virtual water and virtual water trade theory have provided a potential solution to improve water resources management in agriculture and alleviate water crises in water‐scarce regions. The present study evaluates the green and blue virtual water content of wheat, maize and rice at the regional scale in China. It then assesses the water‐saving benefits of virtual water flows related to the transfer of the three crops between regions.Results The national average virtual water content of wheat, maize and rice were 1071 m 3 per ton (50.98% green water, 49.02% blue water ), 830 m 3 per ton (76.27% green water, 23.73% blue water) and 1294 m 3 per ton (61.90% green water, 38.10% blue water), respectively. With the regional transfer of wheat, maize and rice, virtual water flows reached 30.08 Gm 3 (59.91% green water, 40.09% blue water). Meanwhile, China saved 11.47 Gm 3 green water, while it consumed 7.84 Gm 3 more blue water than with a no‐grain transfer scenario in 2009.Conclusion In order to guarantee food security in China, the government should improve water productivity (reduce virtual water content of crops) during the grain production process. Meanwhile, under the preconditions of economic feasibility and land‐water resources availability, China should guarantee the grain‐sown area in southern regions for taking full advantage of green water resources and to alleviate the pressure on water resources. © 2012 Society of Chemical Industry

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