Abstract

Food security is the basic requirement for human health and social stability. However, food pollution risk caused by economic development models, e.g., industrial transfer, is poorly understood. In this study, we developed and tested a point-area-domain cross-disciplinary approach to quantitatively estimate patterns and processes of soil and rice heavy metal (Pb, Hg and Cd) pollution risk caused by the fourth global industrial transfer process in CG Province of China. Our results indicate that the industrial transfer policy caused obvious cross-regional soil Pb, Hg and Cd pollution and industrial transfer. Industrial transfer process largely exacerbated rice Hg pollution risk in industrial transfer undertaking areas, mainly in the west (29.18%), periphery (28.38%) and south (25.88%) regions. The concentration increase in the west ranged from 0.0001 to 0.0775 mg/kg (mean±S.D. 0.00327 ± 0.00447, median 0.0026 mg/kg). The most important industries regarding rice Hg pollution in industrial transfer undertaking areas included special equipment (26.53%)>metal processing (11.93%)>communication equipment (11.25%)>chemical product (10.90%)> electrical machinery and equipment (9.59%). The pollution transfer was mainly attributed to environmental regulations, factor endowment and industrial structure. Our study highlights the importance for the integration of industrial transfer into food security and poverty reduction plans in the developing regions. Environmental implicationFood security is the basic requirement for human health and social stability. However, food pollution risk caused by economic development models, e.g., industrial transfer, is poorly understood. We developed and tested a point-area-domain cross-disciplinary approach to quantitatively estimate patterns and processes of soil and rice heavy metal pollution risk caused by the fourth global industrial transfer process. Our results suggest that industrial transfer process largely exacerbated soil and rice Hg pollution risk in the southeast coastal areas of China. Our study highlights the importance for the integration of industrial transfer into food security strategies in developing countries.

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