Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis

Tibet in China has extremely a fragile natural ecosystem, which is under a great pressure from global changes. The carbon footprint (CF) and water footprint (WF), reflecting the pressures of regional development on the natural environment, represent a lacuna in the field of study in Tibet due to mis...

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Main Authors: Wu Xie, Shuai Hu, Fangyi Li, Xin Cao, Zhipeng Tang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/8/3294
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spelling doaj-fd9c687dec3e4ab695ec15e8939ce8212020-11-25T02:25:04ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-04-01123294329410.3390/su12083294Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend AnalysisWu Xie0Shuai Hu1Fangyi Li2Xin Cao3Zhipeng Tang4School of Management, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei 230009, ChinaSchool of Management, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei 230009, ChinaSchool of Management, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei 230009, ChinaSchool of Management, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei 230009, ChinaInstitute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, ChinaTibet in China has extremely a fragile natural ecosystem, which is under a great pressure from global changes. The carbon footprint (CF) and water footprint (WF), reflecting the pressures of regional development on the natural environment, represent a lacuna in the field of study in Tibet due to missing data. In this paper, the 2012 multi-regional input–output table of China was employed to quantify the CF and WF of Tibet and the relationship between Tibet and other provinces of China. Spatial pattern and key sectors were also studied to demonstrate the current characters and the future trend of footprints. Tibet’s carbon emission was 4.0 Mt, 32.7% of CF, indicating that Tibet was a net importing region of carbon emission. Tibet received embodied carbon emission by trade from other regions, especially from Hebei, Inner Mongolia and Henan provinces, but played a complex role in virtual water allocation by transferring to most provinces and receiving from some provinces. The CF of Tibet will increase under different scenarios of 2030, but the WF can be restricted to 2.5 Gt in the slow scenario. In the future, imports of virtual resources will benefit the fragile ecosystem of Tibet and moreover, it is vital to restrict the local resource-intensive sectors and improve resource-use efficiency.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/8/3294carbon footprintwater footprintmulti-regional input–output modelTibetenvironmental impact
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wu Xie
Shuai Hu
Fangyi Li
Xin Cao
Zhipeng Tang
spellingShingle Wu Xie
Shuai Hu
Fangyi Li
Xin Cao
Zhipeng Tang
Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
Sustainability
carbon footprint
water footprint
multi-regional input–output model
Tibet
environmental impact
author_facet Wu Xie
Shuai Hu
Fangyi Li
Xin Cao
Zhipeng Tang
author_sort Wu Xie
title Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
title_short Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
title_full Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
title_fullStr Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Carbon and Water Footprints of Tibet: Spatial Pattern and Trend Analysis
title_sort carbon and water footprints of tibet: spatial pattern and trend analysis
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Tibet in China has extremely a fragile natural ecosystem, which is under a great pressure from global changes. The carbon footprint (CF) and water footprint (WF), reflecting the pressures of regional development on the natural environment, represent a lacuna in the field of study in Tibet due to missing data. In this paper, the 2012 multi-regional input–output table of China was employed to quantify the CF and WF of Tibet and the relationship between Tibet and other provinces of China. Spatial pattern and key sectors were also studied to demonstrate the current characters and the future trend of footprints. Tibet’s carbon emission was 4.0 Mt, 32.7% of CF, indicating that Tibet was a net importing region of carbon emission. Tibet received embodied carbon emission by trade from other regions, especially from Hebei, Inner Mongolia and Henan provinces, but played a complex role in virtual water allocation by transferring to most provinces and receiving from some provinces. The CF of Tibet will increase under different scenarios of 2030, but the WF can be restricted to 2.5 Gt in the slow scenario. In the future, imports of virtual resources will benefit the fragile ecosystem of Tibet and moreover, it is vital to restrict the local resource-intensive sectors and improve resource-use efficiency.
topic carbon footprint
water footprint
multi-regional input–output model
Tibet
environmental impact
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/8/3294
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AT shuaihu carbonandwaterfootprintsoftibetspatialpatternandtrendanalysis
AT fangyili carbonandwaterfootprintsoftibetspatialpatternandtrendanalysis
AT xincao carbonandwaterfootprintsoftibetspatialpatternandtrendanalysis
AT zhipengtang carbonandwaterfootprintsoftibetspatialpatternandtrendanalysis
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