Comparative Urban Performance Evaluation of Sustainable Urbanization in Four Typical Megalopolises in China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Urban Sustainability Indicators for Performance Evaluation
2.3. Weighting Method of Principal Component Analysis (PCA)
2.4. Hierarchical Clustering for Comparative Analysis of Classifications
3. Descriptive Statistics Analysis of Urban Performance Indicators
3.1. Urbanization Economies
3.2. Infrastructure Development
3.3. Urban Attraction
3.4. Resource Consumption
3.5. Environmental Pollution
4. Comparative Assessment Results with Classification Analysis
4.1. Assessment Results Analysis among Four Megalopolises
4.2. The Sustainability Performance Clustering Classification
- (1)
- Advanced positive type: there are seven cities in this type, including Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Dongguan, Qingdao and Hangzhou. These cities have advanced economies with high urbanization and high-level administrative division. This cluster has the highest Qu points among all these six types, and the Pu points are relatively low. Therefore, the difference between Qu and Pu is significant and the sustainability performance is remarkable. The reason is that most of China’s mega cities are included in this type, such as Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. Their urban population, GDP and income are incredibly high compared to other cities. The control of SO2 discharge, soot and dust discharge, water and energy consumption is done well, which makes those cities grow efficiently and sustainably. Such cities are on the right track and would likely continue to have high performance in the near future. Cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen are already recognized as international mega cities with world-leading infrastructure and outstanding urban attractiveness, and their aggregation attracts young talent which further improves the GDP and incomes, etc. These cities should be aware, however, of the additional challenges they are about to face, which need to be carefully handled. These challenges include the inadequacy of residential areas, green spaces and infrastructure. For cities such as Hangzhou, Qingdao and Dongguan, industrial upgrading will be a priority, as well as how to increase their GDP and income while effectively controlling their NOx emission and wastewater discharges.
- (2)
- Coordinated positive type: there are 17 cites in this type, which can be represented by Wenzhou, Zhoushan, Shantou, Liu’an, Maoming, Heyuan and Weifang. These cities are in a well-coordinated but relatively low position in terms of urban quality and environment. It has the lowest Pu value among all six types, even though its Qu value is low, but the combined values are positive and the sustainability performance is remarkable. Most cities in this type are small, or are sub-cities to mega cities with quite a clear function. For this reason, there is not much pressure from political leaders, and the GDP value is low. However, the SO2 discharge, soot and dust discharge are highly controlled, making their sustainability performance outstanding. Most of these cities are non-heavy industry based, for example the modern agriculture industry in Weifang or the world-famous small commodity trading market for Wenzhou, etc. Their reasonable industrial structures make them even more sustainable than most of those larger cities. Despite their low population, GDP and income, they will maintain a high performance in sustainable development if they remain in control of environmental pressures and manage their industrial structure.
- (3)
- Smart positive type: there are 31 cities in this type (the largest number of cities of any type). Some of the representative cities are Haozhou, Jinhua, Shaoxing, Ningbo, Weihai, Tianjin, Jiaxing, Tai’an, etc. Both Qu and Pu values for this type are at a moderate level, but there are subtle differences between the two dimensions in this type of city, meaning that the sustainable performance of these cities is still in a positive state of development. These cities are steadily improving, with joint implementation of urban construction and environmental control strategies. Most of them are the middle cities of China. Although their statistics values vary, the urban population, GDP, services, and incomes are generally high enough, whereas the SO2 discharge, soot and dust, energy consumption, etc., seem to be well controlled. Their status, however, is still sensitive. Compared to cities in Type I, their Qu values are much lower, and Pu are relatively high. Therefore, cities such as Tai’an and Huangshan should make full use of their tourism resources to develop non-heavy industries and reduce environmental pressures. Some other cities need to focus on controlling environmental pressures, such as Xuzhou, Foshan, Ningbo and Linyi. Other heavy industries, such as Linyi’s building materials and panels industry, need to be upgraded to more green industries such as Ningbo’s petroleum processing and coking industries in order to maintain a more positive sustainability performance.
- (4)
- Transitional negative type: there are 10 cities in this type, include Nanjing, Suzhou, Changzhou, Hefei, Jinan, Wuxi, Zibo, and Dongying, etc. These cities are in the process of industrial transformation and upgrading but are relatively developed. They have very high Qu values, but at the same time have a significantly high value of Pu. The absolute value of Qu is not enough to cover the Pu value, which makes its sustainability performance low. Most of the cities in this type are heavy industry cities, such as Suzhou, Zibo, Dongying, etc. Although their positive efforts to contribute to the city’s GDP have resulted in a relatively good population, income and road infrastructure, the problems of environmental pollution caused by heavy industry are significant. This is especially true for excessive emissions of Nox and excessive energy consumption, which have resulted in these cities having higher Pu values than Qu values. For this type of city, a heavy industry is a double-edged sword for their sustainability performance. On the one hand, the industries have created more income and jobs and given the cities a higher Qu value. On the other hand, they have had a huge negative impact on the environment. Based on this, their priority should be to focus on the control of environmental pressure. For example, Zibo and Dongying require comprehensive industrial restructuring and upgrading, including reduction in the traditional fossil energy consumption and actively laying out new energy sources such as wind and solar power, etc.
- (5)
- Lagging negative type: there are 19 cities in this type, including Shaoguan, Shijiazhuang, Huaibei, Heze, Xingtai, etc. The sustainability performance of this type of city is relevantly low, with the lowest Qu values and slightly higher Pu values than other types. These cities are mostly small or middle-sized cities and have for a long time lagged behind in their environmental governance capacity. They particularly lack urban attractiveness and infrastructure development, although the cities are of medium population, GDP and income. These cities also have high environmental pressures from Nox emissions and energy consumption, causing their future sustainable development to be of concern. As a result, cities with medium amounts of urban development have faced the same situation as some negative mega cities. They have similar Qu values to some positive cities, but it is not well controlled enough to combat the high Pu values that make their sustainability performance overall negative. Therefore, the suggested solution would be to make proper policy for their city’s industrial development, especially the heavy industry-based cities such as Shijiazhuang and Handan. It is heartening to see that some cities are embarking on more green industries, such as the city of Dezhou which has been working hard to develop the largest solar industry in recent years. This is the beginning of a good trend that will help turn negative performance into positive performance in the near future.
- (6)
- Purely negative type: there are seven cities in this type including Tongling, Tangshan, Ma’anshan, Rizhao, Binzhou, Yancheng and Chengde. These cities have the highest Pu values and relatively low Qu values among all six types of cities, showing a remarkable state of unsustainable development. It can be found that most of these cities are heavy industrial cities with high energy consumption and high pollution. To produce higher GDP, urban population and income, they consume overly large amounts of energy, causing much higher Nox discharge and many other environmental problems. For the cities in this type, most of them rely on heavy-industry and natural resource consumption, such as Tongling, Tangshan, Ma’anshan and Binzhou. The coal industry and petroleum industry are the mainstay of their economies. However, they should be aware that once urban resources are depleted, they cannot be repaired, even at great cost. Therefore, a strict policy of energy saving, consumption reduction and tighter control of environmental pressures will work best for these cities. This will take sustained patience over several years to gradually transform into positive sustainability performance.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Assessment Tools of City Scale by Chinese Authority Agencies | Version Year | Scoring Methods | Indicator Categories | Number of Indicators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ecological Counties, Ecological Cities Construction Evaluation System [39] | 2003 (Trial version) | Summation of scores achieved | Economic development; Environmental protection; Social progress | 219 |
2 | China’s Livable Cities Scientific Evaluation Standards [40] | 2007 | Weighted standardized values summation | Social civilization; Economic prosperity; Beautiful environment; Resource carrying; Convenience of life; Public safety | 83 |
3 | Low-carbon City Evaluation System of China [41] | 2011 | Standardized values summation | Economy; Energy; Infrastructure; Environment; Society | 15 |
4 | Green and Low-carbon Cities Evaluation Indicators [42] | 2011 (Trial version) | Summation of scores achieved | Social economy; Planning management; Construction land; Resources and environment; Energy conservation and emission reduction; Infrastructure and greening; Public services; Urban characteristics | 62 |
5 | National Environmental Protection Model City Assessment Index and Implementation Rules [43] | 2011 | Summation of scores achieved | Economic society; Environmental quality; Environmental construction; Environmental management | 24 |
6 | National Ecological Civilization Pilot Policy Evaluation System [44] | 2013 (Trial version) | Summation of scores achieved | Economy; Natural Environment; Built environment; Regulations; Culture | 30 |
7 | Technical Criterion for Ecosystem Status Evaluation [45] | 2015 (Draft) | Weighted standardized values summation | Environmental quality; Pollution load; Ecological construction | 18 |
8 | Evaluation System for the Construction of National Ecological Civilization Model City [46] | 2016 (Trial version) | Summation of scores achieved | Space; Economy; Environment; Life; Regulations; Culture | 35 |
9 | China Green Development Index System [47] | 2016 | Weighted standardized values summation | Resource utilization; Environmental governance; Environmental quality; Ecological protection; Growth quality; Green life; Public satisfaction | 56 |
10 | Evaluation System for Ecological Civilization Construction [48] | 2016 | Summation of scores achieved | Resource utilization; Environmental protection; Annual evaluation results; Public satisfaction; Environmental incidents | 23 |
11 | Evaluation indicators for green cities [49] | 2017 (Trial version) | Weighted standardized values summation | Green production; Green life; environmental quality | 67 |
12 | Evaluation System of the Construction Target of the National Ecological Civilization Pilot Zone [50] | 2018 | Summation of scores achieved | Economic quality; Resource and energy conservation and utilization; Ecological construction and environmental protection; Ecological culture cultivation; Mechanism construction | 49 |
13 | Indicators for City Services and Quality of Life [51] | 2019 | Weighted standardized values summation | Economy; Education; Energy; Environment; Finance; Fire and emergency response; Governance; Health; Leisure; Safety; Shelter; Solid waste; Communication and innovation; Transportation; Urban planning; Wastewater; water and sanitation | 100 |
14 | New-type Urbanization-Evaluation Index System of New Urbanization Quality City [52] | 2020 (Trial version) | Weighted standardized values summation | Economic development; Social culture; Ecological environment; Public services; Residents’ lives; Reward indicators | 76 |
Basic | Label | Description of Indicators | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Dimensions | |||
Qu Quality of built environment | Qu1 | Urbanization economies | |
q1 | Urban population percentage (% of total population) | 8.56 | |
q2 | GDP per capita ($/person) | 8.52 | |
q3 | Services value added (% of GDP) | 8.51 | |
q4 | Income per capita ($/person) | 7.74 | |
Qu2 | Infrastructure development | ||
q5 | Construction land per capita (m2/person) | 9.30 | |
q6 | Residential area per capita (m2/person) | 9.00 | |
q7 | Green area per capita (m2/person) | 9.01 | |
q8 | Road area per capita (m2/person) | 6.02 | |
Qu3 | Urban attraction | ||
q9 | Number of tourists (1000 person) | 10.99 | |
q10 | Foreign direct investment ($106) | 10.09 | |
q11 | Export volume of trade ($106) | 12.25 | |
Pu Environmental pressure | Pu1 | Resource consumption | |
p1 | Energy consumption per capita (GJ/person) | 25.00 | |
p2 | Water consumption per capita (ton/person) | 25.00 | |
Pu2 | Environmental pollution | ||
p3 | Wastewater discharged per capita (ton/person) | 10.47 | |
p4 | SO2 emission per capita (kg/person) | 15.03 | |
p5 | NOx emission per capita (kg/person) | 9.56 | |
p6 | Soot and dust discharged per capita (kg/person) | 14.94 |
Yangtze River Delta | Pearl River Delta | Shandong Peninsula | JingJinJi | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Qu (2010) | 0.157 | 0.182 | 0.127 | 0.122 |
Ranking | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
Qu (2018) | 0.257 | 0.262 | 0.239 | 0.208 |
Ranking | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
Mean | 0.21 | 0.23 | 0.19 | 0.17 |
CAGR (%) | 5.62 | 4.12 | 7.31 | 6.04 |
Pu (2010) | 0.240 | 0.185 | 0.214 | 0.222 |
Ranking | 1 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
Pu (2018) | 0.238 | 0.176 | 0.250 | 0.195 |
Ranking | 2 | 4 | 1 | 3 |
Mean | 0.25 | 0.19 | 0.25 | 0.23 |
CAGR (%) | −0.08 | −0.57 | 1.74 | −1.40 |
Su (2010) | 0.741 | 0.953 | 0.643 | 0.607 |
Ranking | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
Su (2018) | 1.283 | 1.495 | 1.067 | 1.345 |
Ranking | 3 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
Mean | 0.97 | 1.19 | 0.82 | 0.89 |
CAGR (%) | 6.29 | 5.12 | 5.79 | 9.24 |
No. | City Classification | Common Characteristics Description | Level of Urban Sustainability | List of Cities | N |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | Advanced positive type | Advanced economic cities with high urbanization and high-level administrative division | High sustainability with high quality | Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Dongguan, Qingdao, Hangzhou | 7 |
II | Coordinated positive type | Urban quality and environment are in a well-coordinated but relatively backward cities | Moderate sustainability with low pressure | Wenzhou, Zhoushan, Jieyang, Yunfu, Zhanjiang, Chaozhou, Fuyang, Meizhou, Suqian, Weifang, Heyuan, Maoming, Liu’an, Suuzhou, Hengshui, Baoding, Shantou | 17 |
III | Smart positive type | Steady improvement cities with joint implementation of urban construction and environmental control strategies. | Basic sustainability with low quality | Tianjin, Xuzhou, Foshan, Ningbo, Linyi, Langfang, Tai’an, Jiaxing, Zhongshan, Nantong, Yangzhou, Taizhou, Zaozhuang, Lishui, Huai’an, Chuzhou, Shanwei, Anqing, Zhaoqing, Yangliang, Weihai, Huangshan, Zhuhai, Huizhou, Lianyungang, Yantai, Jiangmen, Taizhou, Shaoxing, Jinhua, Haozhou | 31 |
IV | Transitional negative type | In the process of industrial transformation and upgrading but relatively developed cities | Slight unsustainability with high quality | Nanjing, Suzhou, Hefei, Jinan, Wuxi, Changzhou, Zibo, Dongying, Huzhou, Zhenjiang | 10 |
V | Lagging negative type | Long-term multi-dimensional lagged behind cities with inadequate environmental governance capacity | Intermediate unsustainability with low quality | Shijiazhuang, Handan, Chizhou, Shaoguan, Huaibei, Huainan, Wuhu, Qinhuangdao, Quzhou, Cangzhou, Liaocheng, Heze, Bengbu, Dezhou, Qingyuan, Jining, Xuancheng, Zhangjiakou, Xingtai | 19 |
VI | Purely negative type | Heavy industrial cities with high energy consumption and high pollution | Severe unsustainability with high pressure | Tangshan, Tongling, Ma’anshan, Yancheng, Rizhao, Binzhou, Chengde | 7 |
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Fang, X.; Shi, X.; Phillips, T.K.; Gao, W. Comparative Urban Performance Evaluation of Sustainable Urbanization in Four Typical Megalopolises in China. Buildings 2022, 12, 1422. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12091422
Fang X, Shi X, Phillips TK, Gao W. Comparative Urban Performance Evaluation of Sustainable Urbanization in Four Typical Megalopolises in China. Buildings. 2022; 12(9):1422. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12091422
Chicago/Turabian StyleFang, Xue, Xinyu Shi, Tyson Keen Phillips, and Weijun Gao. 2022. "Comparative Urban Performance Evaluation of Sustainable Urbanization in Four Typical Megalopolises in China" Buildings 12, no. 9: 1422. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12091422
APA StyleFang, X., Shi, X., Phillips, T. K., & Gao, W. (2022). Comparative Urban Performance Evaluation of Sustainable Urbanization in Four Typical Megalopolises in China. Buildings, 12(9), 1422. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12091422