Analysis of Water Resource Supply and Demand Balance in High Standard Farmland Construction Projects

Authors

  • Nan Qu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54691/fsd.v3i8.5511

Keywords:

High Standard Farmland; Irrigation Guarantee Rate; Water Resource Balance.

Abstract

High standard farmland construction is an important measure to develop modern agriculture, increase grain production, and promote farmers' income growth in the context of rural revitalization. Based on the overview of water resources in the project area, crop planting structure, irrigation system, and quota, a detailed analysis is conducted on the available water supply and demand for irrigation, to explore whether the regional water resources can fully meet the needs of efficient and water-saving irrigation. The research results can provide detailed data support for project planning and construction, as well as reference for water resource balance analysis of similar projects in mountainous areas.

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References

Muchimamui A M,Chen Z,Shen W, et al. High-standard farmland destruction monitoring by high-resolution remote sensing methods: a 2017-2018 case study of Hebei and Guangdong, China.[J]. Environmental monitoring and assessment,2023,195(6).

Rong X,Yating Z,Jialan Z, et al. Does Construction of High-Standard Farmland Improve Recycle Behavior of Agricultural Film? Evidence from Sichuan, China[J]. Agriculture,2022,12(10).

Xiong Y,Li Y. Study on Water-saving Irrigation for High Standard Farmland Construction[J]. Academic Journal of Environment & Earth Science,2021,3.0(1.0).

Agriculture - Farmland; Findings on Farmland Detailed by Investigators at Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology (Assessment of High-standard Farmland Construction Effectiveness In Liaoning Province During 2011-2015)[J]. Journal of Engineering,2019.

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Published

2023-08-22

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Qu, N. (2023). Analysis of Water Resource Supply and Demand Balance in High Standard Farmland Construction Projects. Frontiers in Sustainable Development, 3(8), 12-15. https://doi.org/10.54691/fsd.v3i8.5511