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Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China: Motivation, history, policies and improved management

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Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China: Motivation, history, policies and improved management. / Sun, Yiming; Li, Hong; Lei, Shuo et al.
In: Eco-Environment and Health, Vol. 1, No. 2, 30.06.2022, p. 63-72.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

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Sun Y, Li H, Lei S, Semple KT, Coulon F, Hu Q et al. Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China: Motivation, history, policies and improved management. Eco-Environment and Health. 2022 Jun 30;1(2):63-72. doi: 10.1016/j.eehl.2022.04.005

Author

Sun, Yiming ; Li, Hong ; Lei, Shuo et al. / Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China : Motivation, history, policies and improved management. In: Eco-Environment and Health. 2022 ; Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 63-72.

Bibtex

@article{778cbf3215f54bb69902359e9ff5e98a,
title = "Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China: Motivation, history, policies and improved management",
abstract = "Rapid urbanisation in China has resulted in an increased demand for land in towns and cities. To upgrade and modernise, China has also moved many major industries from urban centres to less populated areas. With the high economic value of urban land, the transformation and utilisation of brownfield areas have become important economically and socially. The Chinese government has recognised the need for strong frameworks to safeguard soil and groundwater quality, with brownfield sites a key category for management. Strong scientific, regulatory and decision-making frameworks are needed and being adopted to ensure practical, careful and wise use of central and localised government resources, to manage the reuse and regeneration of these brownfield sites. This paper reviews the context, policies and management procedures of developing brownfield sites in countries with a history of brownfield management and discusses China's current situation and priorities for brownfield governance and redevelopment. These include (1) clarification of brownfield site soil contamination risk control standards and risk assessment procedures, (2) the responsibilities of different national and local agencies, (3) the establishment of a national expert committee to advise on best practices, policy and process, (4) the use of registered brownfield databases at national, provincial, municipal and county levels, and (5) the set up of soil pollution prevention fund at the provincial level.",
keywords = "Brownfield, China, Management, UK, Urban soils, USA",
author = "Yiming Sun and Hong Li and Shuo Lei and Semple, {Kirk T.} and Frederic Coulon and Qing Hu and Jingyang Gao and Guanlin Guo and Qingbao Gu and Jones, {Kevin C.}",
year = "2022",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.eehl.2022.04.005",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "63--72",
journal = "Eco-Environment and Health",
issn = "2772-9850",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Redevelopment of urban brownfield sites in China

T2 - Motivation, history, policies and improved management

AU - Sun, Yiming

AU - Li, Hong

AU - Lei, Shuo

AU - Semple, Kirk T.

AU - Coulon, Frederic

AU - Hu, Qing

AU - Gao, Jingyang

AU - Guo, Guanlin

AU - Gu, Qingbao

AU - Jones, Kevin C.

PY - 2022/6/30

Y1 - 2022/6/30

N2 - Rapid urbanisation in China has resulted in an increased demand for land in towns and cities. To upgrade and modernise, China has also moved many major industries from urban centres to less populated areas. With the high economic value of urban land, the transformation and utilisation of brownfield areas have become important economically and socially. The Chinese government has recognised the need for strong frameworks to safeguard soil and groundwater quality, with brownfield sites a key category for management. Strong scientific, regulatory and decision-making frameworks are needed and being adopted to ensure practical, careful and wise use of central and localised government resources, to manage the reuse and regeneration of these brownfield sites. This paper reviews the context, policies and management procedures of developing brownfield sites in countries with a history of brownfield management and discusses China's current situation and priorities for brownfield governance and redevelopment. These include (1) clarification of brownfield site soil contamination risk control standards and risk assessment procedures, (2) the responsibilities of different national and local agencies, (3) the establishment of a national expert committee to advise on best practices, policy and process, (4) the use of registered brownfield databases at national, provincial, municipal and county levels, and (5) the set up of soil pollution prevention fund at the provincial level.

AB - Rapid urbanisation in China has resulted in an increased demand for land in towns and cities. To upgrade and modernise, China has also moved many major industries from urban centres to less populated areas. With the high economic value of urban land, the transformation and utilisation of brownfield areas have become important economically and socially. The Chinese government has recognised the need for strong frameworks to safeguard soil and groundwater quality, with brownfield sites a key category for management. Strong scientific, regulatory and decision-making frameworks are needed and being adopted to ensure practical, careful and wise use of central and localised government resources, to manage the reuse and regeneration of these brownfield sites. This paper reviews the context, policies and management procedures of developing brownfield sites in countries with a history of brownfield management and discusses China's current situation and priorities for brownfield governance and redevelopment. These include (1) clarification of brownfield site soil contamination risk control standards and risk assessment procedures, (2) the responsibilities of different national and local agencies, (3) the establishment of a national expert committee to advise on best practices, policy and process, (4) the use of registered brownfield databases at national, provincial, municipal and county levels, and (5) the set up of soil pollution prevention fund at the provincial level.

KW - Brownfield

KW - China

KW - Management

KW - UK

KW - Urban soils

KW - USA

U2 - 10.1016/j.eehl.2022.04.005

DO - 10.1016/j.eehl.2022.04.005

M3 - Review article

AN - SCOPUS:85138563576

VL - 1

SP - 63

EP - 72

JO - Eco-Environment and Health

JF - Eco-Environment and Health

SN - 2772-9850

IS - 2

ER -