Abstract

Freshwater resources are limited and uneven in their spatiotemporal distribution, and substantial increases in water demand from rapidly developing economies and concentrated populations place pressure on the available water. Research on the inequality of water footprint (WF) could provide countermeasures for the rational use and allocation of water resources. We evaluated the temporal and spatial inequality of WF using the Gini coefficient and imbalance index based on socioeconomic and environmental factors in Jilin Province. The results showed that from 2008 to 2015, the overall inequality of WF in Jilin Province was “relative equality”, and the inequalities between the WF and population, cultivated area were “high equality”; between the WF and gross domestic product (GDP) was “relative equality”; and between the WF and natural water endowment was “high inequality”. With respect to space, the differences of WF inequality were significant. In the west, the WF inequality changed greatly, from “relative equality” to “relative inequality” driven by population, GDP, cultivated area, and natural water endowment. In the middle, the WF inequality showed large internal differences with “high inequality” or “high equality” caused by GDP and natural water endowment. In the east, the WF inequality was relatively stable, at “high equality” or “neutral” affected by natural water endowment and population. The varied impact factors reflected the differences in natural resources and socioeconomic conditions in the various regions, and the results might provide a theoretical basis for guiding the rational allocation of water resources.

Highlights

  • Water is a crucial element to human survival, societal development, and ecologic maintenance [1,2].the global distribution of available water and populations is uneven; inequality exists in human access to freshwater resources [3]

  • 2010, which was mainly attributed to the water footprint (WF) of the stockbreeding decreasing in 2010, after which the values rose steadily

  • The results provided useful references for decision-making on water resource allocation temporal variation and spatial differentiation of WF inequality, improving the research methods of and management in Jilin

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Summary

Introduction

The global distribution of available water and populations is uneven; inequality exists in human access to freshwater resources [3]. China accounts for 20% of the world’s population, whereas its water resources only account for approximately 6% of the total water resources in the world, and the per capita occupancy volume is only a quarter of the world average [4]. In addition to the shortage of water resources, the spatiotemporal distribution of water resources is uneven in. A mismatch exists between the water resources and the distribution of the population in many regions in China [5]. The northern population accounts for 42.1% of the total population, but its water resources account for only 19% of the total water resources in the country. Accelerated urbanization, mass migration, increased population concentration, and the rapid

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