Current Situation, Dilemmas and Measures to Improve Horizontal Ecological Compensation Coordination Mechanisms in River Basins
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. International Research and Practice on the Coordination Mechanisms of River Basins Ecological Protection Compensation
1.2. Research and Practice on Transverse Ecological Compensation in River Basins in China
2. Data and System Construction
2.1. Current Situation of the Wastewater Pollutant Discharge in China
2.2. Main Indicators of Water Quality of Major Tributaries and Provincial Sections in Major Basins
2.3. System Construction for Watershed Ecological Compensation
3. Problem Analysis
3.1. Absence of Laws and Regulations: Lack of Systematic Legislation on HECRB from the Central Government to Local Governments
3.2. Deficiencies in Coordination Mechanisms: Imperfect Diversified and Market-Oriented Compensation Coordination Mechanisms under the Guidance of the Government
- (1)
- Deficiencies in overall coordination make the watershed ecological compensation scattered and unsystematic. Due to the local restrictions to local governments’ management functions as well as the lack of comprehensive and specific laws and regulations on ecological compensation, governments in the upstream and downstream of a basin can only conduct temporary consultations in the form of agreements. A lack of systematicity and sustainability of watershed ecological protection brings difficulties in promoting China’s HECRB coordination mechanism universally.
- (2)
- The coordination mechanism subject is fairly singular, and the coordination mechanisms for diversified and market-oriented ecological compensation are not perfect. Through the analysis of 13 cross-provincial HECRB agreements, it is concluded that the coordination mechanisms mainly involve governments in the upstream and downstream areas and the compensation of funds simply refers to mutual compensation between governments in the upstream and downstream areas, with little involvement of relevant enterprises, social organizations or the public in the basin.
- (3)
- The durations of compensation agreements are too short to form a long-term mechanism for coordinated governance. Similarly, it was found in the analysis of the 13 cross-provincial HECRB agreements that the coordinated governance for each basin is carried out by means of three-year agreements. Such agreements need to be renegotiated once they expire, which fails to achieve a long-term mechanism for coordinated governance.
- (4)
- The scope horizontal coordination is small, which makes it difficult to effectively achieve the effect of coordinated governance in the whole basin. According to statistics, there are over 1500 rivers with a basin area of more than 1000 square kilometers in China, 228 rivers with a basin area of more than 10,000 square kilometers, and over 100 major tributaries in the seven major basins. To date, the country has only signed 13 cross-provincial HECRB agreements, in which a basin area of 0.327184 million square kilometers is involved, consisting of around 3.4% of the land area. On account of complex relationships among the main streams and important tributaries of the seven major basins, only the Henan–Shandong section and the Sichuan–Gansu section in the main stream of the Yellow River signed an ice-breaking agreement on horizontal compensation in 2021; in 2021, Sichuan province and Chongqing selected the main stream of the Yangtze River and the Laixi River Basin as the first batch of pilot rivers in the main stream of the Yangtze River, and signed a compensation agreement.
3.3. Single Compensation Mode: Failure to Effectively Promote the Combination of Resource Protection, Development and Utilization
3.4. Shortage of Compensation Funds: Difficulties in Using Existing Compensation Funds to Make up for Actual Investment in Environmental Governance by Governments in Upstream Areas
4. Measures to Improve HECRB
4.1. Perfecting Laws and Regulations on HECRB
4.2. Building Diversified and Market-Oriented Compensation Coordination Mechanisms under the Guidance of the Government
4.3. Exploring Various Compensation Modes According to Local Conditions and Actively Advancing Indirect Horizontal Ecological Compensation
4.4. Widening the Financing Channels for Horizontal Ecological Compensation with Multiple Measures
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year/Category | Chemical Oxygen Demand | Ammonia Nitrogen Discharge Amount | Total Nitrogen Emission | Total Phosphorus Emission | Other Contaminants |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 2564.8 ↑ | 98.4 ↑ | 323.3 ↑ | 33.7 ↑ | 0.3734 ↓ |
2019 | 567.1 | 46.3 | 117.6 | 5.9 | 0.6293 |
2018 | 584.2 | 49.4 | 120.2 | 6.4 | 0.7158 |
2017 | 608.9 | 50.9 | 120.3 | 7.0 | 0.7639 |
2016 | 658.1 | 56.8 | 123.6 | 9.0 | 1.15994 |
Categories | Textile Industry | Chemical Raw Materials and Chemical Products Manufacturing Industry | Agricultural and Sideline Food Processing Industry | Paper and Paper Products Industry | Food Manufacturing Industry | Wine, Beverage and Refined Tea Manufacturing | Other Industries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chemical oxygen demand | 14.0% | 13.1% | 12.7% | 12.5% | - | - | 47.8% |
Ammonia nitrogen | 9.3% | 22.5% | 11.6% | - | 7.9% | - | 49.2% |
Total nitrogen | 12.8% | 20.9% | 10.1% | 6.9% | 49.4% | ||
Total phosphorus | 9.0% | 11.3% | 26.2% | 8.7% | 44.8% |
Water Body | Number of Section | Proportion (%) | Change from 2020 (%) | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class I | Class II | Class Ⅲ | Class Ⅳ | Class Ⅴ | Inferior Class V | Class I | Class II | Class Ⅲ | Class Ⅳ | Class Ⅴ | Inferior Class V | |||
Yangtze River Basin | Main Tributary Provincial Boundary Section | 935 | 7.0 | 69.3 | 20.5 | 2.6 | 0.5 | 0.1 | −0.3 | 0.1 | 1.4 | −0.8 | 0 | −0.4 |
Yellow River Basin | 222 | 5.0 | 45.9 | 27.5 | 14.9 | 2.3 | 4.5 | −0.8 | −0.3 | 3.1 | 1.6 | −2.1 | −1.3 | |
Pearl River Basin | 180 | 11.1 | 73.9 | 11.1 | 2.8 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 1.1 | −0.5 | 0.5 | −0.5 | −0.5 | 0 | |
Songhua River Basin | 155 | 0 | 21.3 | 46.5 | 24.5 | 5.8 | 1.9 | 0 | 1.9 | −6.4 | 5.8 | 3.9 | −5.2 | |
Huaihe River Basin | 182 | 1.6 | 16.5 | 59.9 | 20.9 | 1.1 | 0 | 1.1 | −2.7 | 11.0 | −6.0 | −1.1 | −2.2 | |
Haihe River Basin | 191 | 5.8 | 29.8 | 32.5 | 27.7 | 3.7 | 0.5 | −3.2 | 4.3 | 9.6 | −2.1 | −5.9 | −2.7 | |
Liaohe River Basin | 63 | 0 | 25.4 | 44.4 | 28.6 | 1.6 | 0 | 0 | 3.7 | 6.1 | −0.8 | −0.1 | −1.7 | |
main rivers of Zhejiang and Fujian | 198 | 8.6 | 62.1 | 24.2 | 4.5 | 0.5 | 0 | 3.0 | −1.0 | −2.6 | 0.5 | 0 | 0 | |
Northwest rivers | 107 | 40.2 | 54.2 | 1.9 | 1.9 | 1.9 | 0 | −2.3 | 4.2 | −1.9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
Southwest rivers | 133 | 9.0 | 75.9 | 11.3 | 2.3 | 0 | 1.5 | 3.7 | −6.1 | 1.5 | 0.8 | 0 | 0 |
No. | Subject Involved | Name of Policy Document | Ecological Compensation Assessment Standard or Objective | Compensation Fund |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Guangdong Guangxi | Implementation Plan for Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream of Jiuzhou River Basin (2015–2017) | Annual average water quality of cross-provincial Shanjiao section shall reach Grade III standard. | A total of 800 million yuan from the central finance; 300 million yuan in three years each from Guangdong and Guangxi. |
Implementation Plan for Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream of Jiuzhou River Basin (2018–2020) | Annual average water quality of cross-provincial Shanjiao section shall reach Grade III standard. | 100 million yuan per year each from Guangdong and Guangxi. | ||
Horizontal Ecological Compensation Agreement for the Upstream and Downstream of Jiuzhou River Basin (2021–2023) | Taking the water quality of cross-provincial Shanjiao section as the assessment standard, the annual average transboundary water quality shall reach Grade III standard with the monthly average compliance rate being over 80%. | Reward funds from the central government; 100 million yuan per year each from Guangdong and Guangxi. | ||
2 | Guangdong Jiangxi | Horizontal Ecological Compensation Agreement for the Upstream and Downstream of Dongjiang River Basin (2016–2018) | Taking the two cross-provincial sections of Miaozuili and Xingning Power Stations as the assessment monitoring sections, the annual average water quality of the effluent section shall achieve Grade III standard. | 300 million yuan each year from the central government; 100 million yuan per year each from Guangdong and Jiangxi. |
Horizontal Ecological Compensation Agreement for the Upstream and Downstream of Dongjiang River Basin (2019–2021) | Taking the two cross-provincial sections of Miaozuili and Xingning Power Stations as the assessment monitoring sections, the monthly average water quality shall achieve Grade III standard, and strive to reach Grade II standard in 2021. | A total of 1.5 billion yuan of ecological compensation funds from the central government, Guangdong and Jiangxi. | ||
3 | Anhui Zhejiang | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream of the Xin’an River basin (2012–2014) | Annual water quality shall meet the assessment standard. P ≤ 1 or P > 1 | 300 million yuan each year from the central government; 100 million yuan per year each from Anhui and Zhejiang. |
Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream of the Xin’an River basin (2015–2017) | Water quality stability coefficient shall be increased from 0.85 to 0.95. 0.95 < P ≤ 1, P ≤ 0.95, P > 1 | 400 million yuan, 300 million yuan and 200 million yuan in the three years, respectively, from the central government; 200 million yuan each year from each of Anhui and Zhejiang. | ||
Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream of the Xin’an River basin (2018–2020) | Water quality stability coefficient shall be increased from 0.85 to 0.95. 0.95 < P ≤ 1, P ≤ 0.95, P > 1 | 200 million yuan each year each from Anhui and Zhejiang. | ||
4 | Hebei Tianjin | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream During the Project of Diverting Water from the Luanhe River to Tianjin (2016–2018) | Monthly average water quality of each assessment section shall reach Grade III or annual average water quality shall reach Grade II standard. | 300 million yuan from central finance; 300 million yuan from each of Tianjin and Hebei. |
Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation in the Upstream and Downstream During the Project of Diverting Water from the Luanhe River to Tianjin (2019–2021) | Taking the sections of Lihe Bridge and Shahe Bridge as the transboundary assessment sections, the annual average water quality shall reach Grade II standard. | 100 million yuan per year each from Tianjin and Hebei. | ||
5 | Yunnan Guizhou Sichuan | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation in the Chishui River Basin (February 2018) | Implement a “two-way compensation” standard to decide whether the downstream or upstream pays ecological compensation funds by the water quality of upstream boundary section that can be above Grade II or inferior to Grade II. | A total of 200 million yuan from Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan in the proportion 1: 5: 4, namely, 20 million yuan, 100 million yuan and 80 million yuan, respectively. |
6 | Beijing Hebei | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation in the Water Conservation Area of Chaobai River Basin in the Upstream of Miyun Reservoir (2018–2020) | Three aspects (water quantity, water quality and upstream behavior control) are considered in the assessment reference. The total nitrogen is assessed on the basis of routine indicators of national assessment and rewards shall be given for total nitrogen decreases. | 200 million yuan from Beijing; 100 million yuan from Hebei. |
7 | Chongqing Hunan | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation in Youshui River Basin (2019–2021) | The two provinces (cities) shall be assessed on the water quality of Liye Town of the national surface water assessment section at the junction of Huayuan County. | According to the agreement, the amount of compensation for reaching or failing to reach the objective shall be 0.4 million yuan per month. |
8 | Anhui Jiangsu | Cooperation Agreement on Establishing Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation Mechanism in Yangtze River Basin (December 2018) | The principle of “two-way compensation” shall be implemented. If the annual water quality reaches Grade II or above or Grade III, the downstream shall compensate the upstream. On the contrary, if the annual water quality achieves Grade IV, V or below, the upstream shall compensate the downstream. | 40 million yuan or 20 million yuan from Jiangsu; 20 million yuan or 30 million yuan from Anhui. |
9 | Guangdong Fujian | Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation for the Upstream and Downstream of Tingjiang-Hanjiang River Basin (2016–2018) | Adopting the principle of “two-way compensation”, it is required that the annual average value of the cross-provincial section of Tingjiang River and Meitan River shall reach Grade III, that of the cross-provincial section of Shiku River shall reach Grade III, and that of the cross-provincial section of Xiangdong River shall reach Grade V. | 100 million yuan each year from Guangdong and Fujian. |
Agreement on Horizontal Ecological Compensation for the Upstream and Downstream of Tingjiang-Hanjiang River Basin (2019–2021) | Double-indicator assessment shall be adopted to examine both the pollutant concentration and water quality compliance rate. | |||
10 | Hunan Jiangxi | Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation Agreement for Lushui River Basin (1 July 2019–30 June 2022) | The water quality of Lushui goldfish stone section reaching class III is set as the assessment objective. | According to the agreement, the amount of compensation for reaching or failing to reach the objective shall be 1 million yuan per month. |
11 | Shandong Henan | Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation Agreement for the Yellow River Basin (Yulu Section) (May 2021) | The principle of “two-way compensation” shall be implemented to assess the annual average water quality and the annual average concentrations of three key pollutants of chemical oxygen demand, ammonia nitrogen and total phosphorus in the cross-provincial section of the main stream of the Yellow River at Yulu section (Liuzhuang section at the national level) in 2020 and 2021. | Fluctuating compensation: 60 million yuan each year as the basic compensation for water quality. In terms of compensation for changes of water quality, the compensation for a decrease of 1% shall be 1 million yuan, and the maximum compensation is 40 million yuan. |
12 | Gansu Sichuan | Horizontal Ecological Compensation Agreement for Yellow River Basin (Sichuan-Gansu Section) (October 2021) | The Maqu section water quality of the main stream of the Yellow River shall reach Grade II standard in the national assessment. | 100 million yuan co-funded by Sichuan and Gansu at the ratio of 1:1. |
13 | Sichuan Chongqing | Implementation Plan for Sichuan-Chongqing Horizontal Ecological Protection Compensation in Yangtze River Basin (2021–2023) | Conduct water quality assessment for the two national assessment sections of the Zhutuo section of the Yangtze River and Gaodong Power Station section of the Laixi River. | 100 million yuan each from Sichuan and Chongqing for protection and governance of the main stream of the Yangtze River; 50 million yuan each fro, Sichuan and Chongqing for conservation and governance of important tributaries of the Yangtze River (Laixi River). |
Ecological Compensation Mode | Compensation Type | Applicable Object | Compensation Subject | Advantage and Disadvantage |
---|---|---|---|---|
Government-oriented | Capital compensation of counterparts, Cooperation, Industrial transfers, Talent training, Co-construction of parks | Public welfare, Ecological public service | The government is the investor and is responsible for the main ecological protection and restoration. | advantages: Reasonable compensation and easy operation can be given to ecological protectors. disadvantages: Single source of funds, government financial pressure, difficult to supervise. |
Market Transaction Type | Emissions trading, Water rights trading, Green finance, Green mark, Green procurement, | Semi-quasi-public welfare ecological public service with strong economic benefits | Enterprises are the investors, and the market is mainly responsible for ecological protection. | advantages: Broadening the sources of funds and reducing the pressure of government funds. disadvantages: Imperfect legal mechanism and high transaction costs. |
Government and social capital cooperative type | Public-private partnerships, Government purchase of services | Quasi-pure public welfare ecological public service with weak economic benefits | Enterprises are the main investors, and the government is the regulator and service buyer. | advantages: Strong public welfare is conducive to stimulating public enthusiasm for environmental protection. disadvantages: Need to strengthen government guidance and supervision. |
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Song, J.; Liang, Z.; Guo, Q.; Wang, C. Current Situation, Dilemmas and Measures to Improve Horizontal Ecological Compensation Coordination Mechanisms in River Basins. Sustainability 2023, 15, 1504. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021504
Song J, Liang Z, Guo Q, Wang C. Current Situation, Dilemmas and Measures to Improve Horizontal Ecological Compensation Coordination Mechanisms in River Basins. Sustainability. 2023; 15(2):1504. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021504
Chicago/Turabian StyleSong, Jibi, Zhi Liang, Quan Guo, and Chengli Wang. 2023. "Current Situation, Dilemmas and Measures to Improve Horizontal Ecological Compensation Coordination Mechanisms in River Basins" Sustainability 15, no. 2: 1504. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021504
APA StyleSong, J., Liang, Z., Guo, Q., & Wang, C. (2023). Current Situation, Dilemmas and Measures to Improve Horizontal Ecological Compensation Coordination Mechanisms in River Basins. Sustainability, 15(2), 1504. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021504