event 30 avr. 2016

Understanding Barriers to Decision Making in the UK Energy-Food-Water Nexus // The Added Value of Interdisciplinary Approaches

The nexus represents a multi-dimensional means of scientific enquiry which seeks to describe the complex and non-linear interactions between water, energy, food, with the climate, and further understand wider implications for society. The paper presents findings from five themed workshops (shocks and hazards, infrastructure, local economy, governance and governments, finance and insurance) with 80 stakeholders from academia, government and industry in the UK to explore the impact of climate and weather shocks across the energy-food-water nexus and barriers to related responses.

Genevieve perron migneron 304338 unsplash
https://unsplash.com/photos/Cefzo2-U88s (C) Genevieve Perron-Migneron / Unsplash

Abstract

The nexus represents a multi-dimensional means of scientific enquiry which seeks to describe the complex and non-linear interactions between water, energy, food, with the climate, and further understand wider implications for society. These resources are fundamental for human life but are negatively affected by shocks such as climate change and characterize some of the main challenges for global sustainable development. Given the multidimensional and complex nature of the nexus, a transdisciplinary approach to knowledge development through co-production is needed to timely and effectively inform the decision making processes to build societal resilience to these shocks going beyond the sectorality of current research practice. The paper presents findings from five themed workshops (shocks and hazards, infrastructure, local economy, governance and governments, finance and insurance) with 80 stakeholders from academia, government and industry in the UK to explore the impact of climate and weather shocks across the energy-food-water nexus and barriers to related responses. The research identified key stakeholders’ concerns, opportunities and barriers to better inform decision making centred on four themes: communication and collaboration, decision making processes, social and cultural dimensions, and the nature of responses to nexus shocks. We discuss implications of these barriers and how addressing these can better facilitate constructive dialogue and more efficient decision-making in response to nexus shocks.

Highlights

  • Transdisciplinary approaches can better inform decision making in the context of nexus shocks.
  • Cross-sectoral, innovative, reflective perspectives better assess impacts and implications of climate shocks across the nexus.
  • We identify and discuss barriers to sectoral responses to nexus shocks in the UK.
  • Cross-sectoral, multi-disciplinary participatory processes enhance knowledge co-production.
  • Inter-disciplinary approaches to nexus shocks are complex due to social and practical limitations.

Authors

  • Candice Howarth, Global Sustainability Institute, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK
  • Irene Monasterolo, Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, Boston University, Boston, USA

Download

ScienceDirect website

Published

April 2016

Published in

Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 61, July 2016, Pages 53-60

Restez informé!

Nous vous informons sur les projets, les évènements, les actions, les publications et les nouvelles en cours !