Abstract

The urban agglomerations in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River (MYR-UA) are facing a severe challenge in reducing carbon emissions while maintaining stable economic growth and prioritizing ecological protection. The energy consumption related to land urbanization makes an important contribution to the increase in carbon emissions. In this study, an IPAT/Kaya identity model is used to understand how land urbanization affected carbon emissions in Wuhan, Changsha, and Nanchang, the three major cities in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, from 2000 to 2017. Following the core idea of the Kaya identity model, sources of carbon emissions are decomposed into eight factors: urban expansion, economic level, industrialization, population structure, land use, population density, energy intensity, and carbon emission intensity. Furthermore, using the Logarithmic Mean Divisia Index (LMDI), we analyze how the different time periods and time series driving forces, especially land urbanization, affect regional carbon emissions. The results indicate that the total area of construction land and the total carbon emissions increased from 2000 to 2017, whereas the growth in carbon emissions decreased later in the period. Energy intensity is the biggest factor in restraining carbon emissions, followed by population density. Urban expansion is more significant than economic growth in promoting carbon emissions, especially in Nanchang. In contrast, the carbon emission intensity has little influence on carbon emissions. Changes in population structure, industrial level, and land use vary regionally and temporally over the different time period.

Highlights

  • Land urbanization is the process of land pattern change, which mainly entails the increase of construction land in that the total land area remains unchanged in a region [7]

  • Identifying the changes of the internal structure of construction land is of value to understanding land urbanization

  • The results show that the built-up area grew monotonically from 2000 to 2017 and that the study area is in the rapid development stage of land urbanization

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Summary

Introduction

Countries around the world are at different stages of development in socioeconomics, and rapid urbanization and human interference have contributed to various environmental challenges [1]. According to statistical data from the World Bank (2016) [2], China is rapidly urbanizing, with the proportion of people living in urban areas increasing from 26% in 1991 to 59% in 2018. The system of land finance leads to land-centered urbanization rather than population-centered urbanization [3]. China’s urbanization has been characterized by a land-centered development pattern centered on the commercialization and expansion of urban land, especially in the provincial capitals [4,5,6]. Many ecological lands have become occupied accompanying this large-scale [9], rapid urban expansion, which has reduced the utilization rate of land resources. Despite the fact that urban development can increase residents’ income and

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