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Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?
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Page 1: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Industrialization:Where is Industry

Distributed?

Page 2: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Major Industrial Regions

• Small minority of countries have become industrial economies

• Four primary industrial regions have emerged all in the Northern Hemisphere– Western and Central Europe– Eastern North America– Russia and Ukraine– Eastern Asia

Page 3: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Four Industrial Regions

• ¾ of the world industrial production is in four regions:

1. NW Europe2. Eastern Europe3. Eastern North America4. East Asia

• Less than 1% of the world’s land is devoted to industry

Page 4: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Four Industrial Regions

12

3 4

Page 5: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Europe• Four Main Industrial Districts

– United Kingdom– Rhine-Ruhr Valley– Mid-Rhine– Northern Italy

• Became important because of their proximity to raw materials (coal and iron ore) and markets (large concentrations of wealthy consumers

Page 6: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

United Kingdom• The Industrial

Revolution originated in northern England and southern Scotland

• Late 1900’s – industry was expanded by attracting high-tech industries

• Japanese companies have built more factories in the United Kingdom than any other European country

Page 7: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Rhine-Ruhr Valley• Location – mostly in

NW Germany, extends in to Belgium, France, and the Netherlands

• Iron and Steel Manufacturing

• Heavy-metal industries – locomotives, machinery, and armaments

Page 8: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Mid Rhine• Western Europe’s second most

important industrial center• SW Germany, NE France, and

Luxembourg• German portion – lacks raw materials,

but it is the center of the consumer market

• The most central industrial area in the EU

• The French portion – Alsace and Lorraine – contains Europe’s largest iron-ore field, and produces 2/3 of France’s steel

Page 9: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Northern Italy• The Po River Basin• Textile manufacturing – 1800s• Numerous workers willing to work for

low wages• Inexpensive hydroelectricity from the

Alps

Page 10: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Eastern Europe Industrial Districts

1. Central 2. St.

Petersburg3. The Volga4. The Urals5. Kuznetsk6. Eastern

Ukraine7. Silesia

12

3

4

5

67

Page 11: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Central Industrial District

• Russia’s oldest, centered around Moscow

• Produces ¼ of the country’s output• Specialize in textiles (linen, cotton,

wool, and silk), chemicals, and light industrial goods

Page 12: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

St Petersburg Industrial District

• Railways• Specializes in shipbuilding• Goods that meet the needs of the

local market (processed food, textiles and chemicals)

Page 13: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

The Volga Industrial District

• Along the Volga and Kama Rivers• Grew during WWII when plants in

the Central and Ukraine regions were occupied by the Germans

• Largest petroleum and natural gas fields

Page 14: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

The Urals Industrial District

• The Ural Mountains contain more than 1,000 types of minerals

• Iron, copper, potassium, bauxite (aluminum ore), and salt

• Industrial development is hindered by a lack of nearby energy sources

Page 15: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Kuznetsk Industrial District

• Russia’s most important manufacturing district east of the Ural Mountains

• Contains the country’s largest reserves of coal and iron ore

Page 16: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Eastern Ukraine Industrial District

• Donetsk coalfield – contains one of the world’s largest reserves of coal

• Also – iron ore, manganese, and natural gas

Manganese

Page 17: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Silesia

• Southern Poland and northern Czech Republic

• Near coalfields but iron ore must be imported

Page 18: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

North America

• Concentration in the NE U.S. and SE Canada

• The east coast was tied to Europe from its founding

• By 1860 – The United States had become a major industrial nation, second to the United Kingdom

Page 19: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

U.S. Industrial Areas

1. New England

2. Middle Atlantic

3. Mohawk Valley

4. Pittsburg-Lake Erie

5. Western Great Lakes

1

2

3

45

Page 20: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

New England

• Developed in the early 19th century, beginning with cotton textiles

• European immigrants• Now – relatively skilled but

expensive labor

Page 21: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Middle Atlantic

• Between NYC and Washington D.C.• The largest U.S. market• Industries that depend on foreign

markets or imported raw materials have located here: NYC, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Wilmington DE

• Other firms seek to be near the financial, communications, and entertainment industries (NYC)

Page 22: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Mohawk Valley• Upper New York state along the Hudson River and Erie

Canal• Buffalo• Inexpensive, abundant electricity, generated by

Niagara Falls has attracted aluminum, paper, and electrochemical industries

Page 23: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Pittsburg-Lake Erie• The area between Pittsburg and

Cleveland is the nation’s most important steel producing area

• Close to Appalachian coal• Minnesota became an important source

of iron ore• Great Lakes

Page 24: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Western Great Lakes

• Extends from Detroit and Toledo to Chicago and Milwaukee

• Chicago– Dominant market between the

Atlantic and Pacific coasts– Center for transportation networks

• Automobile manufacturing

Page 25: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Canada’s Industrial Areas

• St. Lawrence Valley-Ontario Peninsula

• Hydroelectric power from Niagara Falls

• Car manufacturing, aluminum, paper-making, flour mills, textile manufacturing, and sugar refining

Page 26: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

East Asia

• Heterogeneity – the most heterogeneous region in terms of level of development

• Japan – one of the world’s wealthiest countries

• China – second largest economy, behind the U.S.

• China has abundant resources of coal, iron ore, and minerals, but the rest of East Asia has very few

Page 27: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

East Asia

• Labor force = East Asia’s most abundant resource

• Although industry was devastated after WWII, Japan became an industrial power in the 1950’s and 1960’s by offering low priced products

• Highly skilled jobs• Japan is the world’s leading

manufacturer of automobiles, ships, cameras, stereos, and TVs

Page 28: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

East Asia• Uneven

Distribution• Japan’s industry

is concentrated in the central region between Tokyo and Nagasaki

• China’s manufacturing is clustered near the East Coast

Page 29: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Secondary Industrial Regions• South of the world’s primary

industrial region• Industrial regions usually consist

of several zones, each dominated by a particular kind of industry– Iron and steel zone– Coal mining in another– Textiles in a third

• Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam share the economic growth in Pacific Realm

• Most of the world’s industrial activity has traditionally been found in developed countries of the midlatitudes

Page 30: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Maquiladora• Secondary manufacturing

zone • Developed in northern

Mexico near border with US• Where manufactured

products could be sent to US free of import tariffs

• US companies established plants designated to transform imported, day free components or raw material in finished products

• Owned by US• Young women= cheaper

wages

Page 31: Industrialization: Where is Industry Distributed?.

Maquiladora Continued• Factory that imports material and equipment on a duty-

free and tariff-free basis for manufacturing and re-exports the assembled product

• Variety of industries – Electronics, transportation, textiles, machinery

• NAFTA– tax-free– Industry expanded more rapidly

• Dense number of maquiladoras– Pollution– Hazardous waste

• Lack proper waste management facilities and the ability to clean up disposal sites– Hazardous waste illegally disposed