Abstract
Due to the favorable weather, abundant water resources and fertile soil, the area has been known as the ‘‘homeland for crops and fish’’. However, being one of the most developed regions in China, the environmental quality of the Pearl River delta has deteriorated due to recent socioeconomic changes during the past two decades. The drivers are industrialization and economic growth, population growth and agricultural development; and the pressures are water pollution which include nutrients and suspended solids, pesticides, other persistent toxic substances (PAHs and PCBs) and oil. These have imposed various impacts such as eutrophication, formation of red tides and biomagnification of organic contaminants through food chains. In response to these, regulatory measures have been established by the Environmental Protection Bureau of Guangdong Province, joining forces with environmental protection authorities in all urban cities and most counties, in addition to the Hong Kong Environmental Protection Department, to control pollution in order to prevent further environmental deterioration and economic loss. The present paper is an attempt by following the DPSIR approach promoted by the OECD in the early 1990s and further developed by IGBP LOICZ to review the environmental quality of Pearl River with emphasis on water quality and the impact of rapid socioeconomic changes. Copyright © Springer-Verlag.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 28-38 |
Journal | Regional Environmental Change |
Volume | 4 |
Early online date | Nov 2003 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Mar 2004 |