1. Introduction
The United Nations Development Summit held in September 2015 formally adopted the agreement “Transforming our world: The 2030 agenda for sustainable development”, embracing the three dimensions of sustainability, economic, social and environmental, aiming at ending global poverty and building a life of dignity for all. The concept of sustainable development was first proposed in the “Our Common Future” report of the 1987 World Environment and Development Committee, that “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the prevention without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” [
1], generally accepted by most participants.
In recent decades, many studies have focused on evaluating urban sustainable development [
2]. Great efforts have been exerted to study urban sustainability at local/urban, regional, national and international scales (
Table 1). A list of evaluation systems for urban sustainability composed of various sets of indicators were proposed by international and regional organizations at early stage, such as “Driving force-State-Response (DSR)” model developed by The United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) [
3], “Pressure-State-Response (PRS)” model employed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OCED) [
4], “Society-economy-environment” framework proposed by United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) [
5] and “Expanding the Measure of Wealth: Indicators of Environmentally Sustainable Development” developed by the World Bank [
6]. However, these index systems pay more attention to constructing theoretical frameworks of sustainable development, and do not meet the actual demands of different countries. Later, these frameworks were used as references for many countries and communities to develop their own systems at national scale, such as member states of the European Union [
7,
8,
9,
10], the UK [
11] and Singapore [
12]. Based on its own actual situation, China also built index systems with Chinese characteristics by different governmental agencies [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]. Meanwhile, many scholars began to study sustainable development at urban scale. Qualitative and quantitative methods have been used in a number of studies [
19]. Qualitative analysis mainly focuses on the process, paths and origin causes of urban development [
20,
21,
22,
23,
24]; quantitative research chiefly includes the synthetic evaluation of urban sustainable level [
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32], and driving force analysis [
25,
31] and trend analysis [
19,
29,
30] of urban sustainable development. As an important development mode and the main trend of urbanization, the development of urban agglomerations and regions will promote the construction and development of megacities; thus, sustainable development at the regional scale has garnered attention from researchers [
19,
33,
34,
35,
36,
37]. Although a large number of existing studies concentrate on sustainable development from one scale, there are few articles discussing and analyzing sustainable development at multiple scales.
Standardizing, weighting and aggregating are usually the basic process of urban sustainable development assessment [
2]. The weighting methods, which are the critical step of evaluation, can be mainly divided into two categories. One is the subjective method, which determines the weight coefficient of each indicator by comprehensive consulting score, includes analytic hierarchy process(AHP) [
40,
41,
42] and Delphi method [
43]. This method possibly tends to exaggerate or reduce the effects of certain indicators, and easily leads to reflecting the relationship among indicators inaccurately. The other is the objective method, which determines the weight of each index based on internal relationship and variation degree among different indicators, can effectively avoid deviation of human factors, includes principal component analysis (PCA) [
9,
10], the entropy method [
19,
29,
30,
31], grey relational analysis [
25] and the factor analysis [
44].
Since the reform and opening up, the process of China’s urbanization significantly accelerated, and urbanization level increased at an annual rate of more than 1%. From 1978 to 2012, the urban population increased from 170 million to 720 million, and by 2012, the urbanization rate was higher than 53%. Currently, China has 142 cities with a population of more than one million, while there were only 29 cities in 1978. Moreover, there are 25 cities in the world with a population of more than 10 million, and six of them are located in China. China also has 10 cities with a population of between five million and 10 million. Some of these megacities are facing conflicts between their growing population and decreasing urban carrying capacity. What is more, the three urban agglomerations in eastern China, namely Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta, account for only 2.8 percent of the country’s total land area, but they own 18 percent of its total population and contribute 36 percent of its total GDP. Due to the deteriorating environment and increasing global competition, they are now faced with an urgent need for adjustment, optimization, transformation and upgrading. China has made significant progress in urbanization, but there are also many conflicts and unsolved problems. Against these backgrounds, the Chinese government started an important and imperative project “Geographical conditions monitoring (GCM)” in 2012 [
45], which aims at fully revealing the spatial pattern of natural resources, and economic and social development situation, and providing decision support and services for the governments, enterprises and the public. Urban development assessment and analysis as an important topic of comprehensive statistics, and is one of the major jobs of GCM project. The project is based on geospatial statistics and spatial analysis, combined with social and economic statistical data, and has extreme importance and significance. By constructing an index system for urban sustainable development as well as further evaluation and spatial pattern analysis of urban sustainability, this paper provides index model and method supports of urban development assessment for comprehensive statistics and analysis, and the evaluation of urban development level in China as well as offers a reference for monitoring the process of urbanization.
To quantitatively evaluate urban sustainable development level in China and reveal its spatial distribution, a comprehensive index system for urban sustainable development from three aspects, society, economy and environment, is established and then the performance of urban sustainable development is evaluated based on the TOPSIS (Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to an Ideal Solution)-Entropy method. The remainder of this article is organized as follows.
Section 2 introduces the study areas and data.
Section 3 presents the study methods, including construction of the index system for urban sustainable development (USI), the evaluation method and the weighting method of index system. Next, the results and discussion are elaborated in
Section 4. Finally, this paper makes conclusions and gives suggestions in
Section 5.
3. Study Methods
3.1. Establishment of the Index System
A City is a complex organism with three key elements: society, economy and environment. Sustainable development of cities is supposed to be the harmonious and all-round development of these three elements, among which environmental sustainable development serves as the basis, economic sustainable development the guarantee, and social sustainable development the ultimate goal. While undergoing the unprecedented urbanization process over the past few decades, China has been faced with a series of problems caused by urban development, such as depletion of resources, unbalanced regional development and expansion of urban–rural differences, which urgently need to be solved by transforming from traditional development modes into sustainable development.
The establishment of an appropriate index system is the fundamental requirement for scientific analysis of urban sustainable development. Synthetic evaluation of sustainability for urban development is affected by many factors, commonly comprising economic, social and environmental aspects [
2,
5,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]. In this study, a total of 23 indicators are selected to construct the index system from those three basic aspects, based on the understanding of urban sustainable development, systematic selection of indicators, and data integrity and availability. The specific index system is shown in
Table 2.
Specifically, on the social level, the nature of social sustainable development lies in improving the quality of human life, raising the level of human health and creating a social environment guaranteeing people’s equality, freedom, education and human rights. In
Table 2, SO1 is chosen to reflect the quality of human life from the perspective of net income; SO2 reveals the gap of net incomes between rural and urban citizens; SO3 is chosen because the population problem is one of important problems of sustainable development and the density of population can represent urbanization level; SO4 and SO6–SO8 reflect the current situation of housing, education, health care and employment, respectively, which are the most basic social problems; SO5 is used to reflect the condition of water supply; SO9 outlines the condition of public transport facilities and the promotion of green travel; and SO10 shows the convenient degree of traffic, which ensures communication and transportation of social and economic activities.
With respect to economy, sustainable development not only pays attention to the quantity of economic growth, but also pursues the quality of economic development. Economic sustainable development requires changing the traditional development modes, characterized by production and consumption patterns with high input, high consumption and high pollution, thereby realizing cleaner production and consumption to increase gains of economic activity, conserve resources and reduce pollution emissions. As one of the important indexes of economic development assessment, EC1 can directly reveal peoples’ living level; EC2 reflects people’s consumption level and purchasing power of social commodities; EC3 shows the proportion of tertiary industrial output value and the industrial structure; EC4 and EC5 are chosen to reveal resource consumption in economic activities; and EC6 manifests fund investment to promote the advancement of science, technology and education.
In the environmental aspect, the contradiction between environment and economic development has been an outstanding problem in China for a long time. Environmental system suffers from great pressure while economy has been growing at a high speed. The problems of resource waste and environmental pollution are still quite serious. Sustainable development, which stresses the synchronism of economic development, the protection and improvement of ecological environment, and the effective control of resources waste and environmental pollution (contamination of water, air, soil, etc.), can satisfy the human need for material and energy as well as preserve the high quality of the environment to provide a comfortable living environment. EN1 and EN2 quantitatively reveal typical air and water pollutant discharge caused by economic development; EN3–EN5 outline the status of pollutants and waste disposal; EN6 is selected to show the overall situation of urban air quality; and EN7 can demonstrate the situation of green cover and the capacity of carbon sequestration.
In
Table 2, in addition to indicators adopted by the majority of the existing literature [
25,
29,
30,
31,
36,
37], several important indicators are also used in this paper, such as “water coverage”, “teacher–student ratio in middle school”, “number of health workers per 10,000 persons”, “total retail sales of consumer goods per capita” and “industrial waste water emissions per 10,000 output value”. The respectively reasons for inclusion and consideration of these five indicators are elaborated as follows: (1) water coverage is the basic guarantee of people’s life and an indicator necessary to be considered due to the water shortage problem existing in China; (2) the quality of education not only depends on the commonly adopted indicator of number or rate of students, but also on the teacher–student ratio which can help guarantee the quality of education; (3) both the number of health workers and beds per capita are of importance, and as the two factors show the strong positive correlation through correlation analysis, in this study, the former is chosen because of the critical role of doctors in hospitals; (4) consumption has direct and indirect effects on economic growth, and total retail sale of consumer goods per capita is an economic indicator that reflects the consumption level per capita; and (5) both waste water and waste gas emissions have bad effects on environment. Water environment and water security are directly related to people’s life and the needs of economic and social development. Industrial wastewater emissions per 10,000 output value reflects the status of “Green production” and the influence of water environment caused by industrial production.
3.2. Calculation Method of the Weights
Entropy was introduced into information theory by Shannon in 1948, and was previously a physical concept of thermodynamics. The entropy method is an objective weighting method based on the principle that greater uncertainty about outcomes results in a more uniform probability assigned to them [
50]. Nowadays, this method has been widely used in research on urban ecosystems, including evaluation of living environment, ecological environment, economic development, etc. The information entropy can clearly reveal the utility of each indicator and avoid the interference of subjective factors, which ensures that it is more objective and credible than the subjective methods for comprehensive evaluation of multivariate index.
The principles of the entropy method are as follows:
- (1)
The raw data of the indicators are taken as an m × n matrix, where m is defined as the number of evaluation objects and n indicates the number of indicators.
Hence, the original data matrix of the index system can be expressed as Equation (1):
- (2)
Data normalization
Taking into account its differences in dimension and magnitude, the original data cannot be directly used for assessment. After collection of the original data, the process of data normalization is necessary. All indicators are classified into two categories: the positive and the negative. The positive indicator is the indicator for which bigger values are better. The negative one refers to the indicator for which smaller values are better.
When
xij is the positive indicator, the normalized value
yij can be calculated as Equation (2):
When
xij is the negative indicator, the normalized value
yij can be calculated as Equation (3):
where
xij is the value of the
jth indicator of the
ith object. max
xij and min
xij denote the maximum and minimum values of the
jth indicator, respectively.
- (3)
Calculation of the entropy value of the jth indicator
To calculate the entropy value of each indicator, the standardized value of indicator
j for object
i must first be calculated, and is written as Equation (4):
Then, calculate the entropy value of the
jth indicator using Equation (5):
where
k = 1/ln
m.
- (4)
The weighting value of the
jth indicator is defined as Equation (6):
3.3. TOPSIS Model
TOPSIS model (Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to an Ideal Solution) was first proposed by Hwang and Yoon in 1981 [
51]. It is a comprehensive evaluation based on distance and is widely used for multiple attribute decision making [
52,
53,
54,
55,
56]. This model can objectively and comprehensively reflect the level of sustainable development by calculating the closeness degree between an evaluation value and its ideal solution. Specific steps are as follows:
- (1)
Weighted assessment matrix is firstly established as Equation (7).
- (2)
Determine the best solution
and the worst solution
:
- (3)
Calculate the distance
between the evaluation value and the best solution
, and the distance
between the evaluation value and the worst solution
:
- (4)
To compare the distance between the evaluation value and two ideal solutions, calculate the relative quality level of the object
i using Equation (12):
3.4. Evaluation of Urban Sustainable Development and the Performance of Coordinated Degree
In the context of urban sustainability evaluation, the indicators are classified into three dimensions: society, economy and environment. According to the TOPSIS model, evaluation values of each dimension (Ci(SSI), Ci(ECSI) and Ci(ENSI)) are calculated using Equation (12).
The comprehensive evaluation value of each object can be defined as Equation (13):
where
Ci(SSI),
Ci(ECSI) and
Ci(ENSI) denote the evaluation values of social, economic and environmental sustainability; and
wi(SSI),
wi(ECSI) and
wi(ENSI) denote the weighting values of social, economic and environmental dimensions, and are calculated using Equation (6).
Urban sustainable development is not the single rapid development of society, economy or environment, but the highly coordinated development of these three aspects. Therefore, urban sustainable development should take into account the coordination of social, economic and environmental development. The coordination degree of urban sustainable development is calculated as Equation (14):
where
Ci(SSI),
Ci(ECSI) and
Ci(ENSI) denote the evaluation values of social, economic and environmental sustainability; and
is the average of
Ci(SSI),
Ci(ECSI) and
Ci(ENSI).