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Assessing Land Cover Transformation for Urban Environmental Sustainability through Satellite Sensing

Rapid urbanization in Pakistan is triggering regulated and unregulated land cover changes in planned and semiplanned urban areas. The key objective of this study is to assess the spatial–temporal fluctuations in the land use/land cover (LULC) transformations in planned (Islamabad) and semiplanned (R...

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Published in:Sustainability 2022-03, Vol.14 (5), p.2810
Main Authors: Bokhari, Syed Atif, Saqib, Zafeer, Amir, Sarah, Naseer, Salman, Shafiq, Muhammad, Ali, Amjad, Zaman-ul-Haq, Muhammad, Irshad, Azeem, Hamam, Habib
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description Rapid urbanization in Pakistan is triggering regulated and unregulated land cover changes in planned and semiplanned urban areas. The key objective of this study is to assess the spatial–temporal fluctuations in the land use/land cover (LULC) transformations in planned (Islamabad) and semiplanned (Rawalpindi) urban areas over the last forty years (1976–2016). The study focuses on the orientation of LULC modifications and analyzes concomitant impacts on urban environmental sustainability. Therefore, remotely sensed data were retrieved and processed through Google Earth Engine (GEE) by applying supervised classifier algorithms on each of the five chosen Landsat images. The trajectory of LULC changes for each of the four periods 1976–1988, 1988–1995, 1995–2006 and 2006–2016 was critically scrutinized. The observations revealed massive physical expansions and LULC convergences during these timeframes. The proportionate share of built-up surfaces in this contextual setting substantially stretched from 0.83% in 1976 to 23.23% in 2016, while the shares of cropland and shrubberies significantly reduced. The orientation and magnitude of such changes were observed asymmetrically in the adjoining urban settlements. The assessments formulate that availability of land for urban growth, urban planning and regulatory control significantly determines the speed, scale and orientation of urbanization in planned and semiplanned areas. The study substantiates the notions that the efficient use of cost-effective remotely sensed data offers a pragmatic and reliable tool for assessing, evaluating and monitoring urban land resources. The inferences and insights are relevant for urban and regional planners as well as for other scientific communities.
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subjects Agricultural land
Algorithms
Analysis
Classification
Digital archives
Environmental aspects
Land cover
Land resources
Land use
Landsat
Migration
Orientation
Pakistan
Population growth
Precipitation
Remote sensing
Satellite imagery
Satellite imaging
Satellite sensing
Satellites
Sustainability
Sustainable development
Urban areas
Urban ecology
Urban planning
Urban sprawl
Urbanization
title Assessing Land Cover Transformation for Urban Environmental Sustainability through Satellite Sensing
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