Abstract

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) needs little introduction; the infrastructure investment will reconfigure development in Central Asia. As its origin story and initial encounter, Central Asia offers a prismatic lens to delve into the vital impacts and significant changes wrought by the BRI. In the dryland region, the BRI impact on watersheds and agriculture is a critical challenge with direct implications for food security. Framed by diverse research sources, we utilized spatial datasets from the European Space Agency Climate Change Initiative and the World Bank to explore the intersection of food production, water and development. Investigation evaluates the possible trade-offs that Chinese infrastructure investment can have on the communities and environment of Central Asia. The findings identify more than 15,000 km of rail and 20,000 km of roads linked to the BRI crisscrossing the region in 2018. Whilst these transport corridors have improved connectivity, many of these rails and roads traverse important agricultural and water zones, creating undetermined risks and opportunities. Land use change was examined within a 10-km buffer around BRI roads and rails from 2008 to 2018. Railways increased by 23% during this time, yet irrigated and rainfed agriculture decreased whilst urban areas markedly expanded. Contextual research identifies how Chinese policies may encourage agribusiness investment for food exports as possible disruptions to national and regional food supply. However, to date Central Asia provides <1% of Chinese agricultural imports. In fact, Afghanistan is the region’s dominant export market, tripling agricultural imports >300% in this time. Similarly, five times more livestock are traded within the region than to China. Evaluating infrastructure change is essential to understand BRI impacts on environments and societies, with the food-water nexus a particular concern in Central Asia. Limited Chinese imports of Central Asian agriculture suggests the region’s food security will not be significantly altered by the Belt and Road Initiative.

Highlights

  • China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) needs little introduction; in 2019 alone the term was used in>18,000 academic publications

  • Measured analysis is essential for understanding what the Belt and Road Initiative means for the host countries and partner nations it understanding what the Belt and Road Initiative means for the host countries and partner nations passes through and engages with

  • As its origin story and initial encounter, Central Asia offers a prismatic lens to examine the significant changes wrought by the BRI [2,3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) needs little introduction; in 2019 alone the term was used in>18,000 academic publications (see Google Scholar). Description and knowledge are coupled with a a lack of program definition that encourages hope and speculation. Measured analysis is essential for lack of program definition that encourages hope and speculation. As its origin story and initial encounter, Central Asia offers a it passes through and engages with. As its origin story and initial encounter, Central Asia offers a prismatic lens to examine the significant changes wrought by the BRI [2,3,4]. Once considered a Soviet breadbasket, today there are significant infrastructure rivers [5]. Once considered a Soviet breadbasket, today there are significant infrastructure implications implications for agriculture, watersheds and landscapes. This stresses the undefined environmental for watersheds and in landscapes

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