Integrating Environmental Considerations into the Economic Decision-Making Process
Modalities for environmental assessments
East and Southeast AsiaChina (Shanghai) Index
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V. INFORMATION SYSTEM

[ V-A ]

A. Information resources

Urbanization facilitates the transformation of urban functions and industrial structures, which conversely promotes a more rapid urbanization. The proportion of tertiary industry is almost 70% of GDP in most international metropolises, while that of Shanghai increased to 40.1% in 1995 as secondary and tertiary industries began to play their part in the economic expansion of the city. The world is being rapidly transformed into a global information society. The information industry, as the most vital branch in the tertiary industry, must promote the process of urbanization, with the flow of information increasingly taking the place of substance, energy and population flows. And this formless information freeway permeates and radiates throughout the whole city, irrevocably affecting peoples' living and working habits and attitudes, and becoming an important criterion when evaluating the development level and quality of a city. 

1. Internet and information harbour

Shanghai is expected to have become an information harbour in 2010. Its main projects include: (1) To build a main network which covers the whole city and is connected with other networks, both inside the country and overseas, with the Internet penetrating every organization and household; (2) To collect information and develop information systems. That is, to carry out a Golden Card Project and Golden Gate Project to serve all communities, including Shanghai Information Exchange Network, Shanghai Social Security Network, Electronic Data Interchange Network of Shanghai International Economy and Trade, Social Service Network, Golden Card and Point of Sales. (3) To study and introduce the key techniques of information communications, including super-speed fibre-optics, comprehensive exchange, ISDN, intelligence networks, multimedia communication terminals, person-to-person communication techniques, to upgrade platforms of information transfer to digitalization, wide frequency, etc. By building these communication networks and fabrics across the Pacific and along the western shores, installing satellite ground stations in Pudong and Puxi, and accelerating the construction of the Jinhuning Fabric, Huhui Fabric and the fabric along the south-eastern coast, Shanghai will be one of the central nodes on the coast of the western Pacific with influence on the coastal zone and on the hinterland of China. 

2. Urban construction information system

An information system is not only a warehouse of information flow during urbanization but the activator of urbanization. The purpose of an urban geographical information system is not only to collect, store and monitor data and information on the progress of urbanization, but also to supply feedback for evaluation, planning and decision-making and to simulate and predict the city's future. 

Shanghai was quick to recognize the importance of an information system. The Construction Committee of Shanghai began to design an urban information system in 1985, and laid a detailed ten-year plan for an urban construction information system for Shanghai, which is made up of twenty sub-systems, including mapping, urban planning, underground comprehensive pipelines, water supply and coal gas, real estate management, land management, municipal administration, land, environmental protection, general sanitation, traffic management and the Construction Committee's macro-management. In 1990, a small-scale experiment was carried out in Putuo District which has an area of 20 thousand square km and a population of 36,000. In this experiment, thematic spatial databases were first established for the different functional departments of the city, based on which relationships among these departments could be viewed clearly by overlay. Meanwhile, such functions as inquiry and index, report form and statistics of thematic data were also taken into account, which proved to be a step of great importance. Considering the development history of Shanghai, a huge city in a developing country, it is easy to understand why it lacked an integrated plan during its development, a situation resulting from its long colonial period and the effects of a backward agricultural economy. An urban investigation, therefore, as the first step in scientific management and data processing, centred on a survey of land resources, proper house registration, super-scale survey of terrain and so on, is the most. fundamental work of the establishment of an urban geographical information system. 

Progressing from the small-scale experiment, the urban construction information system has moved into the middle stage of application. For example, within the administrative union of districts, the general sanitation information system mentioned above has efficiently and scientifically been applied in respect of urban function departments. At the same time, a number of thematic information systems have also been developed, such as the "100 Police Map Command System", "People's Government Comprehensive Geographical Information System of Shanghai", "Comprehensive Management Information System of Jinqiao Export and Processing District" and "Urban Construction Comprehensive Management Information System of Jingan District". It can almost certainly be expected that based on the office automation of data acquisition, analysis and output, the urban information system of Shanghai will be applied in urban planning, the optimization and evaluation of infrastructure, site selection for bridges, tunnels, and airports, the layouts for urban industrial structure changes, urban disaster prevention, construction of disaster reduction facilities, and so on. As the city develops and progresses into the period of suburbanization and concentration, when satellite towns and urban communities come into being gradually, and when the planning, construction and administration of the city expand into the hinterlands, the urban information system will undoubtedly have to meet the demands of urban sustainable development. It will need not only to simulate the rapid exchange of substance, energy and population flows, but also review the dynamic evolution process of the urban system, accurately predict the perspective of urbanization, and precisely deduce the scale of urban development and the growing mechanism of its spatial pattern. Urbanization should be coordinated with regional sustainable development to create an ecological, civilized and efficient city. 

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