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Analysis for spatial-temporal matching pattern between water and land resources in Central Asia

Ying Zhang, Zhengxiao Yan, Jinxi Song, Anlei Wei, Haotian Sun, Dandong Cheng

2020Hydrology research24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Central Asia, the pioneering place of the ‘Belt and Road’, is under the threat of prominent water issues. Based on the Gini coefficient model and the matching index, the amount of the total renewable water resources and the cultivated land area were introduced to evaluate the matching pattern between the water and land resources in Central Asia. The water problem of Kazakhstan, being the most prominent, shows low water resources per unit area with the highest reclamation rate. The matching degree for the upstream countries of the Aral Sea (Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan) was better than those of the downstream countries (Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan). The Gini coefficient in Central Asia was 0.32, smaller than that of the global average value (0.59). The overall water available for use and the matching cultivated land resources was reasonable. Large differences exist in the matching degree in water distribution and utilization among Central Asian countries. The matching index of water and land resources in Central Asia was 1.25, similar to the matching degree estimated from the Gini coefficient model. Moreover, rational measures are suggested to alleviate the issue of water and land resources matching in Central Asia.

Topics & Concepts

Gini coefficientWater resourcesCentral asiaMatching (statistics)Land reclamationIndex (typography)GeographyDistribution (mathematics)Environmental scienceSpatial distributionWater resource managementPhysical geographyHydrology (agriculture)InequalityGeologyStatisticsEcologyMathematicsComputer scienceRemote sensingBiologyEconomic inequalityGeotechnical engineeringMathematical analysisArchaeologyWorld Wide WebWater resources management and optimizationWater Resources and SustainabilityWater-Energy-Food Nexus Studies
Analysis for spatial-temporal matching pattern between water and land resources in Central Asia | Litcius