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Environmental deterioration in rapid urbanisation: evidence from assessment of ecosystem service value in Wujiang, Suzhou

Li Yu, Yinchao Lyu, Chun Chen, Charles L. Choguill

2020Environment Development and Sustainability38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Land use change is the most prominent feature of Chinese urbanisation. In China, the expansion of land consumed for urban development is inevitable given the rapid increases in the urban economy and urban population, but also in meeting the population’s increasing demand for better quality of life. This paper is based on a research study of Wujiang district in Suzhou, which is considered representative of many of the rapid urbanisation areas within the nation. The objective is to develop an in-depth understanding of the characteristics of land use change and how this change contributes to environmental deterioration, as assessed by changes in the ecosystem service value (ESV). In this study, ESV is defined as the environmental products and functions provided for human well-being. Based on local planning documents, Landsat TM remote-sensing images and field surveys, the research analyses the cost to the environment when traditional land uses are transformed into urbanisation. The research demonstrates that conversion to urban land use which ignores the limit and capacity of the environment can generate significant environmental costs, as assessed by ESV, which in turn, can lead to a deterioration of quality of life for inhabitants, the exact opposite of the original intention. The research demonstrates that by mapping the spatial distribution of ecological service values, ESV can be used as a guide to urban sustainable development.

Topics & Concepts

UrbanizationEcosystem servicesSustainable developmentLand useUrban ecosystemGeographyEnvironmental planningUrban planningEnvironmental resource managementPopulationEnvironmental qualityChinaEnvironmental protectionNatural resource economicsEcosystemEnvironmental scienceEconomic growthEcologyCivil engineeringEconomicsEngineeringArchaeologyDemographySociologyBiologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesUrban Green Space and HealthWildlife-Road Interactions and Conservation
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