Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data

A key focus of international climate action is achieving a terrestrial carbon sink within the framework of carbon neutrality. For certain regions with vital ecological functions and high poverty rates, the generation of surplus ecological carbon income is crucial for mitigating global inequality. Wh...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jiaying Ying, Jiafei Jiang, Huayi Wang, Yilin Liu, Wei Gong, Boming Liu, Ge Han
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-08-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/15/15/3849
_version_ 1797586029260046336
author Jiaying Ying
Jiafei Jiang
Huayi Wang
Yilin Liu
Wei Gong
Boming Liu
Ge Han
author_facet Jiaying Ying
Jiafei Jiang
Huayi Wang
Yilin Liu
Wei Gong
Boming Liu
Ge Han
author_sort Jiaying Ying
collection DOAJ
description A key focus of international climate action is achieving a terrestrial carbon sink within the framework of carbon neutrality. For certain regions with vital ecological functions and high poverty rates, the generation of surplus ecological carbon income is crucial for mitigating global inequality. While the evaluation of the economic benefits of carbon income still faces limitations in terms of inadequacy and inaccuracy, enhancing green carbon poverty alleviation schemes is urgently needed. This project introduces an analysis framework for assessing the land-based ecological carbon sink and poverty alleviation potential based on a per capita ideal carbon sink income evaluation, which compares the regional economic benefits of a carbon sink under different carbon price benchmarks and explores tailored green poverty alleviation strategies. It indicates that the per capita ideal carbon sink income in China exhibits a seasonal variation, ranging from approximately USD 16.50 to USD 261.41 per person per month on average. Its spatial distribution shows a pattern of lower values in the central region and higher values in the north and south, following a “high differentiation, low clustering” distribution pattern. The per capita carbon sink income can reach 30% to 70% of the per capita GDP, with a peak value of USD 19,138.10 per year, meeting the minimum livelihood guarantee for the needs in economically underdeveloped areas. Simultaneously, the per capita carbon sequestration income within the Chinese carbon market is expected to demonstrate a yearly ascending trajectory, with an approximate growth rate of USD 23.6 per individual annually. The southwest, northeast, and north China regions can be prioritized as key areas for carbon market development, facilitating more comprehensive inter-regional and sustainable carbon trading. This study plays a significant role in disclosing the regional ecological function and economic benefits, promoting the use of “carbon neutrality” as a driving force to alleviate global inequality and contributing to global climate action and poverty eradication strategies.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T00:17:29Z
format Article
id doaj.art-700fc103a36b46b78a5efeb7c13bf1e8
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2072-4292
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T00:17:29Z
publishDate 2023-08-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Remote Sensing
spelling doaj.art-700fc103a36b46b78a5efeb7c13bf1e82023-11-18T23:31:41ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922023-08-011515384910.3390/rs15153849Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed DataJiaying Ying0Jiafei Jiang1Huayi Wang2Yilin Liu3Wei Gong4Boming Liu5Ge Han6School of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaSchool of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaSchool of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaSchool of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaHubei Luojia Laboratory, Wuhan 430072, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Information Engineering in Surveying, Mapping and Remote Sensing, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaSchool of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, ChinaA key focus of international climate action is achieving a terrestrial carbon sink within the framework of carbon neutrality. For certain regions with vital ecological functions and high poverty rates, the generation of surplus ecological carbon income is crucial for mitigating global inequality. While the evaluation of the economic benefits of carbon income still faces limitations in terms of inadequacy and inaccuracy, enhancing green carbon poverty alleviation schemes is urgently needed. This project introduces an analysis framework for assessing the land-based ecological carbon sink and poverty alleviation potential based on a per capita ideal carbon sink income evaluation, which compares the regional economic benefits of a carbon sink under different carbon price benchmarks and explores tailored green poverty alleviation strategies. It indicates that the per capita ideal carbon sink income in China exhibits a seasonal variation, ranging from approximately USD 16.50 to USD 261.41 per person per month on average. Its spatial distribution shows a pattern of lower values in the central region and higher values in the north and south, following a “high differentiation, low clustering” distribution pattern. The per capita carbon sink income can reach 30% to 70% of the per capita GDP, with a peak value of USD 19,138.10 per year, meeting the minimum livelihood guarantee for the needs in economically underdeveloped areas. Simultaneously, the per capita carbon sequestration income within the Chinese carbon market is expected to demonstrate a yearly ascending trajectory, with an approximate growth rate of USD 23.6 per individual annually. The southwest, northeast, and north China regions can be prioritized as key areas for carbon market development, facilitating more comprehensive inter-regional and sustainable carbon trading. This study plays a significant role in disclosing the regional ecological function and economic benefits, promoting the use of “carbon neutrality” as a driving force to alleviate global inequality and contributing to global climate action and poverty eradication strategies.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/15/15/3849ecological carbon sinkper capita ideal carbon sink incomenet primary productiongreen income generationpoverty alleviation potentialmandatory (compliant) market
spellingShingle Jiaying Ying
Jiafei Jiang
Huayi Wang
Yilin Liu
Wei Gong
Boming Liu
Ge Han
Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
Remote Sensing
ecological carbon sink
per capita ideal carbon sink income
net primary production
green income generation
poverty alleviation potential
mandatory (compliant) market
title Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
title_full Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
title_fullStr Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
title_short Analysis of the Income Enhancement Potential of the Terrestrial Carbon Sink in China Based on Remotely Sensed Data
title_sort analysis of the income enhancement potential of the terrestrial carbon sink in china based on remotely sensed data
topic ecological carbon sink
per capita ideal carbon sink income
net primary production
green income generation
poverty alleviation potential
mandatory (compliant) market
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/15/15/3849
work_keys_str_mv AT jiayingying analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT jiafeijiang analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT huayiwang analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT yilinliu analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT weigong analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT bomingliu analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata
AT gehan analysisoftheincomeenhancementpotentialoftheterrestrialcarbonsinkinchinabasedonremotelysenseddata