event 14 Dec 2020

Publication // Ecosystem services in the Swedish water-energy-food-land-climate nexus: Anthropogenic pressures and physical interactions

By Lotte van den Heuvel, Malgorzata Blicharska, Sara Masia, Janez Sušnik and Claudia Teutschbein. In this study, literature and expert assessment are used to analyse the water-energy-food-land-climate nexus in Sweden through the lens of the ecosystem services concept to gain insights into interactions between the nexus sectors. By demonstrating how anthropogenic pressures originating from the nexus sectors affect ecosystem functions and services, this paper serves as a foundation to further inform policy making (within and outside Sweden) when considering the water-energy-food-land-climate nexus.

Swedish WEFL

© L. van den Heuvel, M. Blicharska, S. Masia, J. Sušnik and C. Teutschbein

Abstract

Traditionally, challenges of natural resource management have been addressed with a sectoral policy approach. However, it is increasingly recognised that different sectors are interconnected in a complex and mutually interacting system. A nexus approach is proposed to identify synergies and trade-offs between sectors and to foster the sustainable and efficient use of resources, particularly in light of climate change. The nexus approach has led to studies identifying interactions between policy objectives across nexus sectors, but the physical interactions between nexus sectors that can be the result of policy interactions, have received less attention. Nevertheless, such interactions can have severe consequences for the environment, affecting ecosystems and the services they provide. Integrating the nexus approach and the ecosystem service concept may help to better understand pressures and impacts related to a resource nexus and to address trade-offs. In this study, literature and expert assessment are used to analyse the water-energy-food-land-climate nexus in Sweden through the lens of the ecosystem services concept to gain insights into interactions between the nexus sectors. By demonstrating how anthropogenic pressures originating from the nexus sectors affect ecosystem functions and services, this paper serves as a foundation to further inform policy making (within and outside Sweden) when considering the water-energy-food-land-climate nexus.

Highlights

  • Multi-sector nexus analysis in Sweden through an ecosystem service lens.
  • Human impacts on ecosystem functioning can hinder ecosystem service provision.
  • Ecosystem service interactions are underrepresented in Swedish sectoral reports.
  • We present the complex interactions between sectors as base for decision making.
  • Nexus approach helps understanding interactions and anthropogenic effects.

Published

July 2020

By

ScienceDirect, Ecosystem Services, Volume 44

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