Research Article // Coupling coordination and driving factors of the water-energy-food nexus in China: A sustainable development perspective
By Lu et al., This study evaluates the spatiotemporal evolution, coupling coordination degree, and driving mechanisms of China’s water–energy–food nexus from 2006 to 2023, revealing strong but regionally uneven system coordination shaped by technological, economic, and resource-based factors.
Introduction
Water, energy, and food (WEF) are crucial for human survival, making studying the WEF nexus in China vital for sustainable development. This work proposes an evaluation indicator system and analyzes the comprehensive evaluation level, coupling coordination degree (CCD), and spatiotemporal evolution using the comprehensive evaluation model and CCD model. A spatial autocorrelation model is used to examine the CCD across 30 regions of China. Additionally, the geographic spatio-temporal weighted model (GTWR) and geographical detector model are used to pinpoint the driving factors affecting the CCD of the WEF nexus. The results reveal a steady improvement in WEF nexus coordination nationwide, accompanied by significant regional disparities. While eastern provinces exhibit higher and earlier coordination levels, central regions show accelerated progress, and western provinces remain constrained by resource endowments. Moreover, the driving factors of CCD demonstrate pronounced spatial–temporal heterogeneity, with expenditure on R&D funding, disposable income per capita, and GDP growth rate exerting varying influences across provinces and over time. Based on these results, recommendations are made to strengthen food production, promote clean energy development, and optimize water resource structures to enhance the WEF nexus across provinces in China.
Published
December 2025