Safeguarding China’s long-term sustainability against systemic disruptors

Author:

Li KeORCID,Gao LeiORCID,Guo ZhaoxiaORCID,Dong YuchengORCID,Moallemi Enayat A.ORCID,Kou Gang,Chen MeiqianORCID,Lin Wenhao,Liu Qi,Obersteiner MichaelORCID,Pedercini Matteo,Bryan Brett A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractChina’s long-term sustainability faces socioeconomic and environmental uncertainties. We identify five key systemic risk drivers, called disruptors, which could push China into a polycrisis: pandemic disease, ageing and shrinking population, deglobalization, climate change, and biodiversity loss. Using an integrated simulation model, we quantify the effects of these disruptors on the country’s long-term sustainability framed by 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Here we show that ageing and shrinking population, and climate change would be the two most influential disruptors on China’s long-term sustainability. The compound effects of all disruptors could result in up to 2.1 and 7.0 points decline in the China’s SDG score by 2030 and 2050, compared to the baseline with no disruptors and no additional sustainability policies. However, an integrated policy portfolio involving investment in education, healthcare, energy transition, water-use efficiency, ecological conservation and restoration could promote resilience against the compound effects and significantly improve China’s long-term sustainability.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Sichuan University

Open Project of Xiangjiang Laboratory

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference70 articles.

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