Skip to main content
Log in

Environmental cost and pollution risk caused by the industrial transfer in Qinghai Province

  • Research Article
  • Published:
Frontiers of Earth Science Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

With the rising pressure due to energy consumption and costs of environmental protection and recovery, industrial transfer from the eastern to central and western areas has surged in China. However, extremely fragile ecological conditions and severe water shortage are significant hurdles for industry development in Western China. Whether the vulnerable environment can bear the pollution caused by the transferred industry from Eastern China becomes a significant issue. This study firstly estimates energy and environmental costs in different areas of China, and assesses the necessity to upgrade the industrial structure of Qinghai Province. Then the emissions of waste water, waste gas, and smoke caused by transferred industries are calculated by Input-Output Model. On the basis of the effect analysis of waste emission on environment, pollution risks of Qinghai province are assessed. The results illustrate that the costs of environmental protection and recovery in China have a gradient distribution, of which the energy efficiency is lower while environmental costs are higher in Western China. Industrial structure adjustment has different impacts on the pollution of different sectors. Although the development of machinery and equipment, hotels and catering services, and real estate, leasing, and business services has increased the emission of pollutants, it is offset by the decreasing emissions caused by other industries such as construction and metal products. Therefore, although economic development will increase environmental pollution, industrial adjustments can effectively decrease waste water and waste gas emissions to reduce the pollution risk. It should be noted that there are still tremendous challenges for industrial transfer in Qinghai Province to coordinate the environment and industry development.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Bureau of Statistics of Qinghai Province (1991–2011). Qinghai Statistical Yearbook. Beijing: China Statistics Press (in Chinese)

    Google Scholar 

  • Cao G M, Long R J (2009). The bottleneck and its resolutions to the natural recovery of black soil type degraded grassland in the Three River Source Region. Acta Agrestia Sinica, 17(1): 4–9

    Google Scholar 

  • Chen B, Chen G Q (2009). Emergy-based energy and material metabolism of the Yellow River Basin. Commun Nonlinear Sci Numer Simul, 14(3): 923–934

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Christiansen O, Ehnts D H, Trautwein H (2010). Industry relocation, linkages and spillovers across the Baltic Sea: extending the footloose capital model. Baltic Journal of Economics. Baltic International Centre for Economic Policy Studies, 10(1): 61–78

    Google Scholar 

  • Cole M A (2004). Trade, the pollution haven hypothesis and the environmental Kuznets curve: examining the linkages. Ecol Econ, 48(1): 71–81

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dietzenbacher E, Velázquez E (2007). Analysing and alusian virtual water trade in an input-output framework. Reg Stud, 41(2): 185–196

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Fan J (2004). Western development policy: changes, effects and evaluation. In: Yeung Y M, Shen J F eds. Developing China’s West: A Critical Path to Balanced National Development. Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press

    Google Scholar 

  • Hoover E M (1937). Location Theory and the Shoes and Leather Industry. Cambridge: Harvard University Press

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • Jin Z D, You C F, Yu T L, Wang B S (2010). Sources and flux of trace elements in river water collected from the lake Qinghai catchment, NE Tibetan Plateau. Appl Geochem, 25(10): 1536–1546

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kander A, Lindmark M (2006). Foreign trade and declining pollution in Sweden: a decomposition analysis of long-term structural and technological effects. Energy Policy, 34(13): 1590–1599

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kawata Y (2011). Economic growth and trend changes in wildlife hunting. Acta Agric Slov, 97(2): 115–123

    Google Scholar 

  • Kirkegaard J F (2007). Offshoring, outsourcing, and production relocation: labor-market effects in the OECD countries and developing Asia. IIE Working Paper

    Google Scholar 

  • Krueger G G (1991). Environmental impacts of a North American free trade agreement. National Bureau Economic Research Working Paper 3914, NBER, Cambridge M A

    Google Scholar 

  • Lai H H (2002). China’s western development program: its rationale, implementation, and prospects. Mod China, 28(4): 432–466

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Liu G, Lucas M, Shen L (2008). Rural household energy consumption and its impacts one co-environment in Tibet: taking Taktse county as an example. Renew Sustain Energy Rev, 12(7): 1890–1908

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Liu H G, Liu W D, Liu Z G (2011). The quantitative study on interregional industry transfer. China Industrial Economics, (6): 79–88

    Google Scholar 

  • Liu W, Yeung H W (2008). China’s dynamic industrial sector: the automobile industry. Eurasian Geography and Economics, 49(5): 523–548

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • National Bureau of Statistics (2009). Input-Output Tables of China. Beijing: China Statistics Press

    Google Scholar 

  • Okadera T, Watanabe M, Xu K Q (2006). Analysis of water demand and water pollutant discharge using a regional input-output table: an application to the city of Chongqing, upstream of the three gorges dam in China. Ecol Econ, 58(2): 2321–2371

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ouyang Z Y, Zheng H, Huang B R (2009). Regional Ecosystem Assessment and Ecosystem Service Zoning. Beijing: China Environmental Science Press

    Google Scholar 

  • Panayotou T (1993). Empirical tests and policy analysis of environmental degradation at different stages of economic development. Technology, Environment and Employment, Geneva: International Labour Office

    Google Scholar 

  • Ping X G, Jiang Z G, Li C W (2011). Status and future perspectives of energy consumption and its ecological impacts in the Qinghai-Tibet region. Renew Sustain Energy Rev, 15(1): 514–523

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Rodriguez-Clare A (1996). Multinationals, linkages and economic development. Am Econ Rev, 88(5): 1290–1310

    Google Scholar 

  • Shafik N, Bandyopadhyay S (1992). Economic growth and environ-mental quality: time series and cross-country evidence back ground. Paper for World Development Report. World Bank

    Google Scholar 

  • Yang J, Chen B (2011). Using LMDI method to analyze the change of industrial CO2 emission from energy use in Chongqing. Frontiers of Earth Science, 5(1): 103–109

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Zhao X Y (2007). Analysis of the industrial structure transformation and its eco-environment effect in Gansu. Areal Research and Development, 26(2): 102–106

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Jinyan Zhan.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Jiang, Q., Tang, C., Zhan, J. et al. Environmental cost and pollution risk caused by the industrial transfer in Qinghai Province. Front. Earth Sci. 8, 362–374 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11707-014-0403-5

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11707-014-0403-5

Keywords

Navigation