Water pollutant fingerprinting tracks recent industrial transfer from coastal to inland China: A case study

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Abstract

In recent years, China's developed regions have transferred industries to undeveloped regions. Large numbers of unlicensed or unregistered enterprises are widespread in these undeveloped regions and they are subject to minimal regulation. Current methods for tracing industrial transfers in these areas, based on enterprise registration information or economic surveys, do not work. We have developed an analytical framework combining water fingerprinting and evolutionary analysis to trace the pollution transfer features between water sources. We collected samples in Eastern China (industrial export) and Central China (industrial acceptance) separately from two water systems. Based on the water pollutant fingerprints and evolutionary trees, we traced the pollution transfer associated with industrial transfer between the two areas. The results are consistent with four episodes of industrial transfers over the past decade. Our results also show likely types of the transferred industries-electronics, plastics, and biomedicines-that contribute to the water pollution transfer.

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Zheng, W., Wang, X., Tian, D., Jiang, S., Andersen, M. E., He, G., … Qu, W. (2013). Water pollutant fingerprinting tracks recent industrial transfer from coastal to inland China: A case study. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01031

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