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Allocation and adaptation in China’s blue carbon policy: a quantitative textual analysis based on a “theme-instrument-stage” framework

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This study explores China's blue carbon policy through a quantitative textual analysis framed by a novel "Instrument-Theme-Stage" framework. Blue carbon policies are vital for climate change mitigation and marine conservation. By evaluating policy documents issued since 2015, the research highlights the current reliance on capacity-building instruments while revealing underutilization of supply-oriented, regulatory, and demand-based tools. Identifying structural imbalances such as disproportionate instrument allocation and weak thematic alignment, the study recommends strategies for rebalancing the instrument mix and enhancing the adaptability of China's blue carbon governance.
Allocation and adaptation in China’s blue carbon policy: a quantitative textual analysis based on a “theme-instrument-stage” framework
Blue carbon policy is a strategic priority for mitigating climate change and advancing marine conservation. Quantifying the attributes of these policies is essential for their scientific formulation and for driving sustainable innovation. Grounded in policy instrument theory, this study constructs a three-dimensional “Instrument-Theme-Stage” framework to evaluate the blue carbon policy documents issued in China since 2015. Through quantitative text analysis, the research examines the evolutionary process and distribution of policy instruments. Findings reveal that China has established a preliminary policy system which is heavily reliant on capacity-building instruments, whereas supply-oriented, regulatory, and demand-based instruments see limited use. Moreover, the analysis identifies structural imbalances, including disproportionate instrument allocation, uneven thematic coverage, and weak alignment between policy instruments and specific themes. To address these issues, this study recommends rebalancing the instrument mix, strengthening thematic coordination, and ensuring precise matching of instruments to policy goals. Doing so will improve the adaptability and strategic configuration of China’s blue carbon governance.

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#climate change impact#marine science#climate monitoring#marine biodiversity#research collaboration#marine life databases#research datasets#blue carbon policy#climate change#policy instrument theory#marine conservation#quantitative text analysis#policy goals#sustainable innovation#Instrument-Theme-Stage framework#instrument allocation#policy documents#policy system#capacity-building instruments#thematic coverage