Book Title: | NA |
Year Published: | 2003 |
Month Published: | NA |
Author: | Lasserre, F. |
Book Group Author: | NA |
Abstract: | Water scarcity is mostly a man-made problem that increasingly affects people's lives and questions economic output in Northern China. Policy options addressing the serious water shortages in the region include conservation and water management reform, which is unpopular; grain imports and the downsizing of agriculture; derivation of Yangze water; derivation of the Amur and other international rivers. All solutions present major difficulties, whether domestic or international, for the Chinese authorities. While major decisions have not yet been taken, evidence shows major works such as water transfers from the Yangze or water pricing are not only unavoidable, but will not be enough to meet the growing demand for water in the region. |
Pages: | 153 - 159 |
URL: | http://0-search.ebscohost.com.catalog.library.colostate.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=cookie,ip,url,cpid&custid=s4640792&db=lah&AN=20033067088&site=ehost-live |
Volume: | 47 |
Number: | 6 |
Journal: | Water Science and Technology |
Journal ISO: | NA |
Organization: | NA |
Publisher: | NA |
ISBN: | NA |
ISSN: | 0273-1223 |
DOI: | NA |
Keywords: | decision making, demand, water availability, waterconservation, water deprivation, water policy, water resources, watersupply, China, East Asia, Asia, Developing Countries, choice, watersupplies, Natural Resource Economics (EE115) (New March 2000), Policyand Planning (EE120), Supply, Demand and Prices (EE130), Water Resources(PP200), Social Psychology and Social Anthropology (UU485) (New March2000) |
Source: | EBSCO |
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