The Industrial Structure Adjustment and Environmental Improvement - From the Case of Suzhou River Change

Article Preview

Abstract:

The Suzhou River once was a seriously polluted belt gathered by a large number of factories with the growth mode of high material consumption, high energy consumption, high pollution and low technology. With the industrial restructuring, the tertiary industry replaced the secondary industry, and business, real estate, tourism, creative industry have become the major industry beside the Suzhou River. Relying on the river coordinated function, the Suzhou River showed its industrial charm with additional role of sightseeing, tourism and recreation. It is the right decisions and strong measures of Shanghai municipal government that make the Suzhou River, the previously polluted river, flow to an ecological civilization.

You might also be interested in these eBooks

Info:

Periodical:

Pages:

980-983

Citation:

Online since:

March 2015

Authors:

Export:

Price:

Permissions CCC:

Permissions PLS:

Сopyright:

© 2015 Trans Tech Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved

Share:

Citation:

* - Corresponding Author

[1] Baumol W. J., Oates W. E., The Theory of Environmental Policy (2nd edition), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, (1988).

Google Scholar

[2] Coase, The firm, the market and the law, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, (1988).

Google Scholar

[3] Feng Zhijun, Circular Economy Introduction, Beijing: Renming Press, pp.18-20, (2004).

Google Scholar

[4] Freeman, R.E., Strategic Management: A Stakeholder Approach, Pitman, Boston, MA, (1984).

Google Scholar

[5] Hong Tao, Suzhou River, Chinese First Polluted River Reborn, Shanghai Standardization, (5): 20-22, (2001).

Google Scholar

[6] Li Junyang, et al, Suzhou River and National Industry, Project Report, December, (2007).

Google Scholar

[7] Marshall A., Principles of Economics (reprint) , New York: Prometheus Books, (1997).

Google Scholar

[8] Pigou, A. C., The Economics of Welfare, London: Macmillan and Co, (1920).

Google Scholar

[9] Water Conservancy Newspaper of China, Shanghai Mother River, No. 5, (2001).

Google Scholar

[10] WCED (World Commission on Environment and Development), Our Common Future (The Brundtland Report), Oxford: Oxford University Press, (1987).

Google Scholar