2010
DOI: 10.1021/es100886r
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Applying the Input-Output Method to Account for Water Footprint and Virtual Water Trade in the Haihe River Basin in China

Abstract: The virtual water strategy which advocates importing water intensive products and exporting products with low water intensity is gradually accepted as one of the options for solving water crisis in severely water scarce regions. However, if we count the virtual water embodied in imported products as the water saved for a region, we might overestimate the saving by including the virtual water that is later re-exported in association with the proceeded products made from the originally imported products. This pr… Show more

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Cited by 204 publications
(108 citation statements)
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“…This region is also densely populated, highly developed, and the most water-scarce region in China. It has been transferring real water from outside through various water diversion projects [15]. In recent years, the ecological environment of the watershed has been severely damaged as a shortage of water resources and a series of ecological environmental problems have made the region the most prominent contradiction between water and humanities in China [16].…”
Section: Estimating the Effect Of Precipitation And Vegetation On Watmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This region is also densely populated, highly developed, and the most water-scarce region in China. It has been transferring real water from outside through various water diversion projects [15]. In recent years, the ecological environment of the watershed has been severely damaged as a shortage of water resources and a series of ecological environmental problems have made the region the most prominent contradiction between water and humanities in China [16].…”
Section: Estimating the Effect Of Precipitation And Vegetation On Watmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, it is consistent with Renault's (2002) 'savings' perspective which assumes that the volume water embedded in imported products is the volume of water that would have been consumed if Cyprus had produced the goods domestically. This is commonly employed in EEIO water studies focusing on single countries (see, for example, Lenzen & Foran, 2001;Sun & Pratt, 2014;Zhao et al, 2010) and where identifying the origin and impact of water originating from abroad falls outside the scope of the study. Nonetheless, the EEIO framework described in this study can certainly accommodate an MRIO model as a future refinement (see Cazcarro et al, 2014).…”
Section: Limitations and Uncertainty -Improving Estimatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neglecting return flows in the industrial sectors in the calculation of virtual water flows is also seen in other studies, e.g. Hoekstra and Chapagain, 2007;Yu et al, 2010;Zhao et al, 2010. We would like to emphasize that the motivation of this study, as stated in the title, is to explicitly address the impact of China's international trade on the water resources and uses in individual provinces.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 81%