Research on Water Rights Allocation of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Correlation Theory
2.1.1. The Concept and Basic Principles of Water Rights Allocation
2.1.2. The Definition of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food
2.2. Regional Overview of the Study Area
2.3. Construction of the Water Rights Allocation Model
2.3.1. The Objective Function of Fairness
2.3.2. The Objective Function of Efficiency
- (1)
- Water resources benefit life, energy, food planting, other agricultural systems, and the general industry
- (2)
- The water resources benefit for ecology
- (3)
- The efficiency objective function of water rights allocation established according to the above items is:
2.3.3. The Objective Function of Coordinated Development
- (1)
- The selection of comprehensive evaluation indicators for coordinated development is shown in Table 1.
- (2)
- The coordinated development index can be quantified with the entropy weight method:
- (A)
- Normalization treatmentwhen the indicator is positive
- (B)
- The calculation of the indexCalculate the weight of the indicator in the year i under the index j:Calculate the information entropy of indicator j:Determine the weight of indicator j:Calculate the coordinated development indicator Gi in the year i:
- (C)
- The objective function of coordinated development
2.3.4. The Constraints of Industry Water Rights
- (1)
- The constraints of water rights of life:
- (2)
- The constraints of water rights of ecology:
- (3)
- The constraints of water rights of energy industry:
- (4)
- The constraints of water rights of food planting:
- (5)
- The constraints of water rights of other agriculture:
- (6)
- The constraints of water rights of general industry:
- (7)
- The constraints of total water rights:
- (8)
- The method to solve model
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Results Analysis of Water Resources Value in Various Industries
- (1)
- Comparison of the water resources value in various industries under current water rights and allocated water rights. In the efficiency objective of city-industry water rights allocation model, the emergy method is used to calculate the value of water resources in various industries in this paper. The comparison of water resources value in various industries before and after water rights allocation is shown in Figure 2:
- (2)
- Comparison of the value of water resources per cubic meter in various industries. According to the calculation of the value of water resources and the allocation results of water rights in various industries, the value of water resources per cubic meter in Yinchuan city can be obtained. The value of water resources per cubic meter of the living system is the highest, reaching 15.54 CNY/m3, followed by that of the energy industry system, reaching 10.28 CNY/m3, and that of the food production system is the lowest, only 0.67 CNY/m3. The value of water resources per cubic meter in the ecosystem is 2.05 CNY/m3, that of other agricultural systems is 4.94 CNY/m3, and that of general industrial systems is 5.37 CNY/m3. Wang Yu et al. [44] used the emergy method to calculate the value of water resources per cubic meter of the four sectors (life, industry, extra-river ecology, and agriculture) in nine provinces and autonomous regions in the Yellow River Basin. They also obtained the result that the value of water resources per cubic meter of life sector is the largest and that of the agriculture sector is the smallest. Li et al. [43] also suggested that the value of water resources per cubic meter of agriculture is minimal. The food planting industry is faced with the problem of low water efficiency, and it is a trend that accelerates the development of regional water-saving agricultural engineering renovation.
4.2. Results Analysis of Coordinated Development Index G
4.3. Results Analysis of Water Rights Allocation
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Water, ecology, energy, and food crises are major challenges to current global development. These four resources are intertwined and affect each other, and can therefore not be discussed individually. Therefore, starting from their coordinated development, they can better solve the crisis. The quantitative method of water–ecology–energy–food coordinated development constructed in this study, and the quantitative calculation results of Yinchuan coordinated development, can provide management reference for management departments;
- (2)
- In this paper, the emergy method is used to achieve a unified and objective quantitative calculation of the value of water resources in various industries, which makes the result of water rights allocation more reliable. At the same time, it also has certain fairness significance. The Emergy method can realize the unified quantification of the economic, social, and ecological environmental value of water resources. The value of water resources calculated by this method is more scientific and reasonable;
- (3)
- The water rights allocation model of regional water–ecology–energy–food coordinated development established in this paper has ensured the water security of ecological restoration, key energy industries, and food planting. It can take reference and help for effectively solving the contradiction between the supply and demand of regional water resources, promoting the harmony of water use in various industries. It can also promote the sustainable development of economy, society, and ecology.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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System | Indicator | Unit | Indicator Attribute |
---|---|---|---|
Water | Per capita water resources (a1) | m3/pc | + |
Utilization ratio of water resources (A2) | % | − | |
Utilization ratio of groundwater resources (A3) | % | − | |
Utilization ratio of unconventional water (A4) | % | + | |
Water consumption of 104 CNY GDP (A5) | m3/104 CNY | − | |
Ecology | Annual precipitation (b1) | mm | + |
Green space coverage rate (B2) | % | + | |
Per capita green area (B3) | m2/pc | + | |
Energy | Per capita energy production (c1) | tce/pc | + |
Energy consumption of 104 CNY GDP (C2) | tce/104 CNY | − | |
Energy self-sufficiency rate (C3) | % | + | |
Food | Per capita cultivated area (d1) | m2/pc | + |
Per capita food production (D2) | kg/pc | + | |
Proportion of added value in primary industry (D3) | % | − | |
Food self-sufficiency rate (D4) | % | + | |
Water–ecology | Proportion of water rights in ecology (ab1) | % | + |
Water–energy | Water consumption of per unit energy production (ac1) | m3/tce | − |
Proportion of water rights in energy industry (AC2) | % | − | |
Proportion of water rights in general industry (AC3) | % | − | |
Water–food | Proportion of water rights in food planting (ad1) | % | − |
Irrigation water consumption of Per unit cultivated area (AD2) | m3/hm2 | − | |
Coefficient of irrigation water effective utilization (AD3) | + | ||
Ecology–energy | Proportion of clean energy generation (bc1) | % | + |
Ecology–food | Application amount of chemical fertilizer Per unit cultivated area (bd1) | t/hm2 | − |
Energy–food | Agricultural machinery power per unit cultivated area (cd1) | kw/hm2 | − |
Proportion of energy consumption in primary industry (CD2) | % | − | |
Economic | Per capita gdp (j1) | 104 CNY/pc | + |
GDP growth rate (J2) | % | + | |
Proportion of added value in tertiary industry (J3) | % | + | |
Social | Proportion of water rights in life (h1) | % | + |
Rate of population growth (H2) | ‰ | − | |
Engel Co-efficient (H3) | % | − | |
Urbanization rate (H4) | % | + | |
Population density (H5) | pop/km2 | − | |
Environment | Sewage treatment rate (z1) | % | + |
Greenhouse gas emission per 104 CNY GDP created (Z2) | kg/104 CNY | − |
Industry | Water Rights of Life WL | Water Rights of Ecology WE | Water Rights of Energy Industry WN | Water Rights of Food Planting WF | Water Rights of Other Agriculture WO | Water Rights of General Industry WI | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Water rights (×108 m3) | 0.99 | 1.77 | 1.80 | 4.06 | 5.20 | 0.88 | 14.70 |
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Zhang, W.; He, Y.; Yin, H. Research on Water Rights Allocation of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food. Water 2022, 14, 2140. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14132140
Zhang W, He Y, Yin H. Research on Water Rights Allocation of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food. Water. 2022; 14(13):2140. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14132140
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Wenge, Yifan He, and Huijuan Yin. 2022. "Research on Water Rights Allocation of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food" Water 14, no. 13: 2140. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14132140
APA StyleZhang, W., He, Y., & Yin, H. (2022). Research on Water Rights Allocation of Coordinated Development on Water–Ecology–Energy–Food. Water, 14(13), 2140. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14132140