Regional variability in water use intensity in China by clustering analysis

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Abstract

Water use intensity (WUI) reveals water withdrawals with respect to economic output. Decomposing WUI into factors provides inner-system information affecting the indicator. The present study investigates variability in WUI among provinces in China by clustering the principal components of the decomposed factors. Motivated by the index decomposition method, the authors decomposed WUI into seven factors: water use in agricultural, industrial, household and ecological sectors, exploitation rate of water resources, per capita water resources and population intensity. Those seven factors condense into four principal components under application of principal component analysis. ComprehensiveWUI is calculated by these four components. Then the cluster analysis is applied to get different patterns in WUI. The principal components and the comprehensive intensity are taken as cluster variables. The number of clusters is determined to be three by applying the k-means clustering method and the F-statistic value. Variability in WUI is detected by implementing three clustering algorithms, namely k-means, fuzzy c-means and the Gaussian mixture model.WUI in China is clustered into three clusters by the k-means clustering method. Characteristics of each cluster are analyzed.

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Fan, X., Xu, H., Ning, C., & Wu, L. (2016). Regional variability in water use intensity in China by clustering analysis. Water Science and Technology: Water Supply, 16(4), 1102–1109. https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2016.028

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