Preliminary strategic environmental assessment of the Great Western Development Strategy: Safeguarding ecological security for a new western China

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Abstract

The Great Western Development Strategy (GWDS) is a long term national campaign aimed at boosting development of the western area of China and narrowing the economic gap between the western and the eastern parts of China. The Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) procedure was employed to assess the environmental challenges brought about by the western development plans. These plans include five key developmental domains (KDDs): water resource exploitation and use, land utilization, energy generation, tourism development, and ecological restoration and conservation. A combination of methods involving matrix assessment, incorporation of expert judgment and trend analysis was employed to analyze and predict the environmental impacts upon eight selected environmental indicators: water resource availability, soil erosion, soil salinization, forest destruction, land desertification, biological diversity, water quality and air quality. Based on the overall results of the assessment, countermeasures for environmental challenges that emerged were raised as key recommendations to ensure ecological security during the implementation of the GWDS. This paper is intended to introduce a consensus-based process for evaluating the complex, long term pressures on the ecological security of large areas, such as western China, that focuses on the use of combined methods applied at the strategic level. © 2011 The Author(s).

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Li, W., Liu, Y. J., & Yang, Z. (2012). Preliminary strategic environmental assessment of the Great Western Development Strategy: Safeguarding ecological security for a new western China. Environmental Management, 49(2), 483–501. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-011-9794-1

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