IWA Publishing
 IWA Publishing Journals   Subscriptions   Authors   Users   Librarians   FAQs 

Water Policy Vol 9 No S1 pp 95–108 © IWA Publishing 2007 doi:10.2166/wp.2007.047

Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: alternative scenarios and policy options

Ximing Caia and Claudia Ringlerb

aHydrosystems Laboratory, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 205 N. Mathews Av, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
bCorresponding author. International Food Policy Research Institute, 2033 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006, USA c.ringler@cgiar.org


ABSTRACT

China is facing growing water scarcity in many river basins due to rapid economic development, an expanding population, growing urbanization, and limited scope to develop new supplies. Water overdrafts, both from surface and sub-surface sources, are causing serious environmental problems ranging from the degradation of deltaic ecosystems of major rivers to aquifer depletion in North China. The attendant need to meet environmental water requirements is exacerbating the already tenuous problem of inter-sectoral water competition. The most widely advocated solution for the present and future environmental water management challenges of China involves the reallocation of water from agriculture to urban and environmental sectors. Such a solution can be myopic, unless potential repercussions on national food production and irrigating farmers are addressed. This paper identifies the role of increased water-use efficiency for enhanced environmental flows, and develops options for balancing environmental and food needs in China based on simulations using an integrated, global water–food projections model.

Keywords: Agricultural development; China; Environmental water requirements; Groundwater overdraft; Water resources management


Full article (PDF Format)


PAY-PER-VIEW: Buy this article for £23.5 (IWA MEMBER PRICE: £17.62) - All prices include VAT
Checkout