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Impacts of Urban Expansion on Terrestrial Carbon Storage in China

X. Liu, S. Wang, P. Wu, K. Feng, K. Hubacek, X. Li, L. Sun,

. 2019 ; 53 (12) : 6834-6844. [pub] 20190528

Language English Country United States

Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Urban expansion is one of the main factors driving terrestrial carbon storage (TCS) changes. Accurate accounting of TCS and rigorous quantification of its changes caused by historical urban expansion may help us to better predict its changes in the future. This study focuses on the carbon impacts of urbanization in China where the share of the urban population has increased from 18% in 1978 to 59% in 2017 and the growing will continue in the coming decades. Our results show that China's TCS decreased at an accelerating pace over the past three decades with an average reduction of 0.72TgC/y in 1980-1990 and 8.72TgC/y in 2000-2010, mostly due to conversion from cropland and woodland to urban land. Through simulating urban expansion under four scenarios from 2010 to 2050, we found a potential increasing trend in land conversion from woodland to urban land. This conversion trend would result in carbon storage loss at an average rate of 9.31TgC/y ∼ 12.94TgC/y in 2010-2050. The increasing trend in both land conversion and carbon storage loss is especially visible in the population centers of the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta. Considering that the indirect emission effects of urbanization, such as farmland displacement, population migration, and land degradation, may be much larger, the overall emission impact of forthcoming urban expansion in China would increase the uncertainty of the nation's carbon emissions and potentially undermine China's targets as committed in the Paris Climate Agreement.

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$a Urban expansion is one of the main factors driving terrestrial carbon storage (TCS) changes. Accurate accounting of TCS and rigorous quantification of its changes caused by historical urban expansion may help us to better predict its changes in the future. This study focuses on the carbon impacts of urbanization in China where the share of the urban population has increased from 18% in 1978 to 59% in 2017 and the growing will continue in the coming decades. Our results show that China's TCS decreased at an accelerating pace over the past three decades with an average reduction of 0.72TgC/y in 1980-1990 and 8.72TgC/y in 2000-2010, mostly due to conversion from cropland and woodland to urban land. Through simulating urban expansion under four scenarios from 2010 to 2050, we found a potential increasing trend in land conversion from woodland to urban land. This conversion trend would result in carbon storage loss at an average rate of 9.31TgC/y ∼ 12.94TgC/y in 2010-2050. The increasing trend in both land conversion and carbon storage loss is especially visible in the population centers of the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta. Considering that the indirect emission effects of urbanization, such as farmland displacement, population migration, and land degradation, may be much larger, the overall emission impact of forthcoming urban expansion in China would increase the uncertainty of the nation's carbon emissions and potentially undermine China's targets as committed in the Paris Climate Agreement.
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$a Feng, Kuishuang $u Department of Geographical Sciences , University of Maryland , 2181 Samuel J. LeFrak Hall, 7251 Preinkert Drive , College Park , Maryland 20742 , United States.
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$a Hubacek, Klaus $u Department of Geographical Sciences , University of Maryland , 2181 Samuel J. LeFrak Hall, 7251 Preinkert Drive , College Park , Maryland 20742 , United States. Center for Energy and Environmental Sciences (IVEM), Energy and Sustainability Research Institute Groningen (ESRIG) , University of Groningen , Groningen , 9747 AG Netherlands. Department of Environmental Studies , Masaryk University , Brno , Czech Republic. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis , Schlossplatz 1 - A-2361 Laxenburg , Austria.
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$a Li, Xia $u School of Geographic Sciences, Key Laboratory of Geographic Information Science (Ministry of Education) , East China Normal University , 500 Dongchuan Road , Shanghai 200241 , PR China.
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$a Sun, Laixiang $u Department of Geographical Sciences , University of Maryland , 2181 Samuel J. LeFrak Hall, 7251 Preinkert Drive , College Park , Maryland 20742 , United States. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis , Schlossplatz 1 - A-2361 Laxenburg , Austria. School of Finance & Management , SOAS University of London , London WC1H 0XG , UK.
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