Assessment and Spatio-Temporal Evolution of Marine Fisheries’ Carbon Sink Capacity in China’s Three Marine Economic Circles
Author:
Jin Yue1, Ma Jintao1, Li Cheng2, Hu Qiuguang134
Affiliation:
1. School of Business, Ningbo University, Ningbo 315000, China 2. School of Government and Management, Yunnan University, Kunming 650000, China 3. Marine Econmic Research Center, Ningbo University Donghai Academy, Ningbo 315000, China 4. Zhejiang Marine Development Think Tank Alliance, Ningbo 315000, China
Abstract
With the increasing pressure of resource decline and environmental pollution faced by the green transformation of marine fisheries, marine fishery carbon sinks are an increasingly close link to national strategic interests and economic lifelines. It is, therefore, necessary to explore paths for the enhancement and development of the carbon sink capacity of marine fisheries. Based on the economic data of marine fisheries from 2002 to 2021, this paper measures the capacity and characteristics of marine fishery carbon sinks in provincial areas, applies the kernel density estimation method to depict the dynamic evolution of the distribution of absolute differences in marine fishery carbon sinks, and at the same time, identifies the factors influencing the spatial imbalance in the development of marine fishery carbon sinks as well as the spatial spillover effects. The results show the following: (1) From the total amount, the fishery carbon sink capacity of China’s three marine economic circles has fluctuated and increased over the past 20 years, with obvious differences among different circles, and the marine fishery carbon sink capacity of the eastern, northern, and southern marine economic circles has risen sequentially. This trend corresponds to the economic disparities among the three circles, demonstrating a transition from economic to industrial driving effects. (2) From the spatial point of view, the fishery carbon sink capacity shows a trend of increasing year by year, concentrating in the circles, and overflowing between the circles. (3) The results of a partial derivative test further show that among the main influencing factors of marine fishery carbon sinks, capital, labor, and market openness have direct positive effects on marine fishery carbon sinks, and the direct effect of innovation is the strongest, and the significance of the indirect effect of the three circles is weaker compared to the direct effect and total effect. As a result, the carbon sink of China’s marine fisheries has a large room for improvement, and in order to promote the high-quality development of China’s marine fisheries, it is still necessary to accelerate the circulation of resources within the marine economic circle, accelerate the research of fishery technology, actively develop the carbon sink fishery, and enhance the specialization of aquatic product processing.
Funder
Ningbo University National Natural Science Foundation of China Zhejiang Province Natural Science Foundation Yunnan University Humanities and Social Sciences Foundation
Reference42 articles.
1. State Council (2021). Opinions of the State Council on the Complete and Accurate Implementation of the New Development Concept to Do a Good Job in Carbon Peaking and Carbon Neutralization. 2. Comparison of Carbon Neutralization Model Selection and Ecological Costs in Carbon Deficit Provinces—Taking Liaoning Province as an Example;Hu;Econ. Geogr.,2021 3. Luo, Y.-Y., Chen, X.-C., Xie, R.-L., Ruan, Z.-H., Lu, Z.-Q., Jiang, L.-S., Li, Y.-F., and Liu, W.-S. (2023). The Effect of Water Spinach on the Water Quality, Antioxidant System, Non-Specific Immune Response, Growth Performance, and Carbon Balance in Red Tilapia Production. Fishes, 8. 4. Prediction of carbon neutral pathways in China under shared socio-economic pathways;Liu;J. Geogr.,2022 5. Evolution and spatial convergence characteristics of synergistic development of economic development quality and ecological resilience in coastal zone cities;Zhao;Econ. Geogr.,2023
|
|