Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 16 Par: 2 (2024)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Impact of New Urbanization on Water Ecological Civilization: Based on the Empirical Analysis of Prefecture-Level Cities in Jiangxi, China

Daxue Kan    
Wenqing Yao    
Lianju Lyu and Weichiao Huang    

Resumen

This study aims to improve the level of water ecological civilization (WEC) in the urbanization process based on the data of prefecture-level cities in Jiangxi, China, from 2011 to 2020. This paper applies spatial analysis methods such as the natural fracture method, barycenter transfer model, and standard deviation ellipse method to explore the spatiotemporal evolution characteristics of WEC and the impact of new urbanization (NU) on WEC. The NU pilot construction is further regarded as an exogenous impact, and the ?net effect? of the NU pilot policy on WEC is tested. The results showed that (1) the spatial distribution pattern of the east?west polarization of WEC was broken, and a spatial distribution pattern of strong in the north and weak in the south was gradually formed. (2) NU contributes to improving the WEC level, among which population, digital, and green urbanization can significantly promote the WEC level, while economic urbanization impedes the improvement of the WEC. This conclusion is still valid following a series of robustness tests. (3) heterogeneity analysis showed that the impact of NU in improving the level of WEC is more evident in cities with scarce water resources, non-resource-based cities, and non-old industrial base cities after the implementation of NU planning. (4) NU?s pilot policy can help improve the WEC level in the region and the WEC level in neighboring regions through the spillover effect of policy. Therefore, it is necessary to make use of the superimposed effect of multidimensional urbanization based on urban characteristics, implement differentiated policy, break administrative barriers, make use of the spatial spillover effect of pilot policy, and improve the WEC level.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Melody R. Mukandi, Moses Basitere, Seteno K. O. Ntwampe, Mahomet Njoya, Boredi S. Chidi, Cynthia Dlangamandla and Ncumisa Mpongwana    
The poultry industry generates significant volumes of slaughterhouse wastewater, laden with numerous pollutants, thus requiring pretreatment prior to discharge. However, new technologies must be used to re-engineer the existing wastewater treatment equip... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Cristobal Aguilar-Gallardo and Ana Bonora-Centelles    
Cell and gene therapies represent promising new treatment options for many diseases, but also face challenges for clinical translation and delivery. Hospital-based GMP facilities enable rapid bench-to-bedside development and patient access but require si... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Joana Carneiro, Dália Loureiro, Marta Cabral and Dídia Covas    
This paper presents and demonstrates a novel scenario-building methodology that integrates contextual and future time uncertainty into the performance assessment of water distribution networks (WDNs). A three-step approach is proposed: (i) System context... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Tianyi Yang, Marcus White, Ruby Lipson-Smith, Michelle M. Shannon and Mehrnoush Latifi    
Changing the physical environment of healthcare facilities can positively impact patient outcomes. Virtual reality (VR) offers the potential to understand how healthcare environment design impacts users? perception, particularly among those with brain in... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Aljawharah A. Alnaser, Ali Hassan Ali, Haytham H. Elmousalami, Ahmed Elyamany and Ahmed Gouda Mohamed    
This study introduces a pioneering structural equation modeling (SEM)-based framework to assess BIM-DT adoption readiness in sustainable construction. The research?s approach delves into the intricate correlation between key success factors (KSFs) and su... ver más
Revista: Buildings