Finite land resources and competition

Helmut Haberl, Cheikh Mbow, Xiangzheng Deng, Elena G Irwin, Suzi Kerr, Tobias Kuemmerle, Ole Mertz, Patrick Meyfroidt, B. L. Turner II

    Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningpeer review

    34 Citationer (Scopus)
    2654 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Rising demand for land-based products (food, feed, fi ber, and bioenergy) as well as conservation of forests and carbon sinks create increasing competition for land. Landuse competition has many drivers, takes different forms, and can have many significant implications for ecosystems as well as societal well-being. This chapter discusses several emerging issues, including the effect of increased demand for nonprovisioning ecosystem services ( biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration), urbanization, bioenergy, and teleconnections. Three major types of land-use competition are discerned: production versus production (e.g., food vs. fuel), production versus conservation (e.g., food production vs. conservation), and built-up environment versus production or conservation (e.g., food vs. urban). Sustainability impacts that result from land-use competition are analyzed and found to differ strongly between the different
    types of land-use competition. They are associated with important trade-offs and
    high uncertainty. Institutional aspects related to land-use competition are discussed using a conceptual model that distinguishes types of institutions (government, private, community) as well as their functions (objectives, distribution/ equity, effectiveness/efficiency). Analysis of long-term trajectories suggests that land-use competition is likely to intensify in the medium- to long-term future, mainly in the face of expected scarcities in resource supply (e.g., in terms of limited resources such as fossil fuels), mitigation and adaptation policies related to climate change, as well as climate change impacts and demographic pressures. The chapter concludes with a discussion of major
    research gaps, and it outlines priority research topics, including the improved analysis of interdependencies of land and energy systems, “ land architecture” (i.e., the significance of spatial confi gurations), and multiscale models to assess local-global connections and impacts.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TitelRethinking Global Land Use in an Urban Era
    RedaktørerKaren S Seto, Anette Reenberg
    UdgivelsesstedCambridge, MA
    ForlagMIT Press
    Publikationsdato2014
    Sider35-69
    Kapitel4
    ISBN (Trykt)9780262026901
    StatusUdgivet - 2014
    NavnStrungmann Forum reports
    Vol/bind14

    Citationsformater