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AuthorHan, M.Y.
AuthorChen, G.Q.
AuthorMustafa, M.T.
AuthorHayat, T.
AuthorShao, Ling
AuthorLi, J.S.
AuthorXia, X.H.
AuthorJi, Xi
Available date2016-02-22T09:04:54Z
Publication Date2015-12
Publication NameEcological Modelling
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.05.024
CitationHan, M.Y., Chen, G.Q., Mustafa, M.T., Hayat, T., Shao, L., Li, J.S., Xia, X.H., Ji, X. "Embodied water for urban economy: A three-scale input-output analysis for Beijing 2010", (2015) Ecological Modelling, 318, pp. 19-25.
ISSN0304-3800
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/4173
AbstractThe scheme of a three-scale input-output analysis is presented in this study to investigate the water use profile of the urban economy in Beijing. Defined as total water including direct and indirect water, embodied water for an urban economy supported by massive domestic and foreign trade can be decomposed into nine categories corresponding to three sources (local withdrawal, domestic imports, and foreign imports) and three destinations (local final demand, domestic exports, and foreign exports). Based on statistics for Beijing in 2010, the case urban economy is endowed with just 3.53 billion m3 of local water withdrawal, whereas the total embodied water demand is estimated up to 13.61 billion m3, almost quadruple the local water withdrawal. The extra 10.08 billion m3 of indirect water use is obtained via cross-boundary trade. Overall, Beijing's total water demand is satisfied mainly by domestic imports by a share of more than 60%, and partly by foreign imports by a share of around 20%. The unintentionally induced water embodied in domestic and global trade plays an essential role in satisfying the water demand, which has essential implications for decision making to ease urban water scarcity.
SponsorSpecialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education of China (grant no. 20120001110077) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 11272012)
Languageen
PublisherElsevier
SubjectBeijing
Embodied water
Input-output analysis
Urban economy
Water resources
TitleEmbodied water for urban economy: A three-scale input-output analysis for Beijing 2010
TypeArticle
Pagination19-25
Volume Number318


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