Geography Study Notes: Physical and Human Geography of the PRD Region

Hey everyone! Welcome to your study notes for the Pearl River Delta (PRD) region. You might be wondering, "Why study a region just across the border?" Well, the PRD is one of the most dynamic and rapidly changing places on Earth, and it's our closest neighbour! Its transformation from a quiet farming area into a global manufacturing powerhouse directly affects Hong Kong's economy, environment, and daily life. In this chapter, we'll explore this amazing story of change, its consequences, and what the future holds. Let's get started!


1. The Pearl River Delta as a Region

What makes the PRD a 'region'?

First, what is a region? Think of it as a way geographers group places together. A region is an area that has common features that make it different from surrounding areas. These can be physical features (like a mountain range) or human features (like a shared economy or culture).

The PRD is considered a region because the areas within it share:

  • A common physical landscape: A low-lying delta formed by the Pearl River and its tributaries.
  • A connected economy: The cities work together as a massive hub for manufacturing, trade, and finance.
  • A shared culture and dialect: Cantonese is widely spoken, connecting it culturally to Hong Kong and Macau.
  • Dense transport networks: High-speed rail, highways, and ports link all the cities together tightly.

Location, Location, Location! Site and Situation

A region's geography is defined by its site and situation. Don't worry, this is easier than it sounds!

Site: This is the actual physical land where a place is. It's what's naturally there.

  • The PRD's site is a river delta. This means it has flat land, fertile soil from river deposits, and a dense network of rivers.
  • It has a subtropical climate, which means hot, rainy summers and mild winters. This was originally great for farming!

Situation: This is its location relative to other places. It's about its connections and neighbours.

  • The PRD's situation is its biggest advantage! It's located right next to Hong Kong and Macau, giving it access to their world-class financial services and ports.
  • It's on the coast of the South China Sea, a major international shipping route, making it perfect for exporting goods to the rest of the world.
Did you know?

The PRD is one of the most densely urbanized regions in the world. The World Bank refers to it as a 'mega-urban region' where the cities of Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan, Foshan and others have essentially merged into one massive city cluster!

Key Takeaway for Section 1

The PRD is a distinct region defined by its flat, fertile delta (site) and its strategic location next to Hong Kong and major sea routes (situation). These geographical features created the perfect conditions for its incredible economic transformation.


2. The Great Transformation: From Farms to Factories

The story of the PRD since the 1980s is one of jaw-dropping change. In just a few decades, vast areas of farmland were replaced by bustling factories and skyscrapers.

Changing Agriculture

Before the 1980s: The PRD was mainly a rural area focused on subsistence agriculture. Farmers grew rice and other basic crops primarily to feed their own families.

After the 1980s: There was a shift to export-oriented and commercial agriculture.

  • Instead of just growing rice, farmers began growing high-value products like fresh flowers, vegetables, and fish.
  • Why? To sell to the growing cities in the PRD and, importantly, to export to places like Hong Kong where there's high demand. This was much more profitable!

Changing Manufacturing Industry

This is the biggest change of all! The PRD became known as the "World's Factory".

Stage 1 (1980s-1990s): Labour-intensive industries

  • These were the first industries to arrive. They rely on a large number of workers to do simple, repetitive tasks.
  • Examples: Assembling toys, stitching clothes and shoes, putting together simple electronics.
  • These industries were perfect for the PRD at the time because there was a huge supply of cheap labour.

Stage 2 (2000s-Present): Capital and technology-intensive industries

  • As the PRD developed, it started moving up the value chain. These industries require large investments in machinery (capital) and skilled workers (technology).
  • Examples: Manufacturing smartphones, building cars, producing advanced electronics and telecommunications equipment (like Huawei).
  • This shift happened because labour costs rose, and the region developed better technology and infrastructure.

Quick Review: Why did this massive change happen?

The number one reason was China's "Open Door Policy" starting in 1978. The government decided to open up the economy to the world, and the PRD was chosen as a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) to experiment with a more market-based economy. This policy unlocked a combination of powerful factors:

  1. Policy & Land: The government made it easy and cheap for companies to set up factories.
  2. Labour: A massive pool of cheap migrant workers from all over China came for jobs.
  3. Capital: Investment money and factory owners, especially from Hong Kong, poured in to take advantage of the lower costs.
  4. Location: Its proximity to Hong Kong provided access to management skills, finance, and one of the world's best container ports for exporting goods.
Key Takeaway for Section 2

Driven by the "Open Door Policy", the PRD's economy shifted dramatically. Agriculture became commercial, and manufacturing evolved from simple, labour-intensive tasks to advanced, technology-intensive production, turning the region into a global economic powerhouse.


3. A New Landscape: The Urban Explosion

When millions of jobs appear, millions of people follow. This led to one of the fastest and largest urban expansions in human history.

Changing Land Use Patterns

The change is simple to see from a satellite: green turned to grey. The land use pattern shifted from being rural-agricultural dominant to urban-industrial dominant.

  • Farmland, fish ponds, and villages were paved over to build factories, housing estates, roads, and commercial centres.
  • This process is called urban expansion or urbanisation.

Features of the PRD's Urban Expansion

The growth was so fast and unique that it created some special features you need to know.

Feature 1: City Clusters

Instead of just one city growing huge, a whole network of cities grew together and merged. This is a city cluster. Think of Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan, and Foshan as a team of cities that are functionally linked. People and goods move between them easily thanks to an incredible network of highways and high-speed trains. It functions like one giant super-city.

Feature 2: Villages-in-the-city (城中村)

This is a very important concept! As cities like Shenzhen and Guangzhou expanded outwards, they literally grew around the original farming villages.

  • The city would build modern skyscrapers and wide roads right up to the edge of the old village.
  • The village itself often remained, becoming a super-dense, chaotic area of low-rise buildings packed together, with narrow alleys instead of streets.
  • These "villages" became a crucial source of cheap housing for the millions of migrant workers who couldn't afford to live in the new, expensive apartment blocks.

Analogy: Imagine a new, modern shopping mall being built, but they leave the old Dai Pai Dong stalls in the middle of the food court. The "village-in-the-city" is kind of like that—a piece of the old, rural landscape trapped inside the modern city.

Key Takeaway for Section 3

The industrial revolution in the PRD triggered rapid urban expansion, transforming the landscape from rural to urban. This created a unique urban form characterized by interconnected city clusters and the phenomenon of "villages-in-the-city".


4. The Price of Progress: Environmental Problems & Solutions

Unfortunately, this rapid development came at a huge environmental cost. When you build so many factories and cities so quickly, pollution is often a major consequence.

Environmental Pollution in the PRD

The region has faced serious environmental degradation.

Types of Pollution:

  • Air Pollution: Caused by emissions from factories, coal-fired power plants, and the explosion in the number of cars. This creates smog (that hazy air) and acid rain.
  • Water Pollution: Factories dumping untreated industrial waste and cities releasing untreated sewage directly into the Pearl River and its tributaries. This kills marine life and makes the water unsafe.
  • Spatial Distribution: Pollution is worst in the dense industrial zones like Dongguan and parts of Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

The Impacts of Pollution

The consequences are felt across society, the economy, and even here in Hong Kong.

  • Social Costs: Serious health problems for residents, especially respiratory illnesses like asthma. A lower quality of life due to dirty air and water.
  • Economic Loss: The government has to spend billions on "clean-up" programmes. Pollution can also deter new, high-tech companies and talent from moving to the region.
  • Impact on Hong Kong: This is key! Pollution doesn't stop at the border. Prevailing winds, especially in winter, blow air pollution from the PRD directly to us, causing many of our hazy days. Pollutants in the Pearl River also flow out to sea, affecting Hong Kong's waters and marine ecosystems.
Common Mistake to Avoid

Don't think that only rich regions care about the environment. The PRD government is now investing heavily in environmental protection because they know that a clean environment is essential for attracting high-tech industries and improving people's lives in the long run.

Management Strategies: What's being done?

Recognizing the crisis, governments in the PRD and Hong Kong are working to fix the problems. Here are the main strategies:

  1. Legislation: Introducing and enforcing stricter environmental laws. For example, heavily fining factories that exceed pollution limits.
  2. Prevention and Control: Requiring factories to install pollution-control technology (e.g., filters on smokestacks). Shifting from coal to cleaner energy sources like natural gas and renewable energy.
  3. Treatment: Building more advanced sewage treatment plants and launching projects to clean up the most polluted rivers.
  4. Education: Running public campaigns to encourage recycling, save energy, and raise awareness about environmental protection.
  5. Cross-border Cooperation: The Hong Kong and Guangdong governments work together. They share air quality monitoring data and have set up joint targets to reduce regional air pollution.
Key Takeaway for Section 4

The PRD's rapid, often unregulated, growth led to severe air and water pollution, which has social and economic costs and directly impacts Hong Kong. In response, a combination of strategies including stricter laws, cleaner technology, and cross-border cooperation are being implemented to create a more sustainable future.