| Literature DB >> 27405653 |
Johan Rockström1, John Williams2, Gretchen Daily3, Andrew Noble4, Nathanial Matthews5, Line Gordon6, Hanna Wetterstrand6, Fabrice DeClerck7, Mihir Shah8, Pasquale Steduto9, Charlotte de Fraiture10, Nuhu Hatibu11, Olcay Unver9, Jeremy Bird12, Lindiwe Sibanda13, Jimmy Smith14.
Abstract
There is an ongoing debate on what constitutes sustainable intensification of agriculture (SIA). In this paper, we propose that a paradigm for sustainable intensification can be defined and translated into an operational framework for agricultural development. We argue that this paradigm must now be defined-at all scales-in the context of rapidly rising global environmental changes in the Anthropocene, while focusing on eradicating poverty and hunger and contributing to human wellbeing. The criteria and approach we propose, for a paradigm shift towards sustainable intensification of agriculture, integrates the dual and interdependent goals of using sustainable practices to meet rising human needs while contributing to resilience and sustainability of landscapes, the biosphere, and the Earth system. Both of these, in turn, are required to sustain the future viability of agriculture. This paradigm shift aims at repositioning world agriculture from its current role as the world's single largest driver of global environmental change, to becoming a key contributor of a global transition to a sustainable world within a safe operating space on Earth.Entities:
Keywords: Agriculture development; Anthropocene; Global sustainability; Livelihoods; Resilience; Sustainable intensification
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27405653 PMCID: PMC5226894 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0793-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
The implications of the planetary boundary process for SIA
| Planetary boundary process | Proposed boundary level (range of uncertainty) | Current level | Politically agreed/proposed boundary | Implication for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Climate change | 350 ppm CO2 (350–450 ppm) | 396.5 ppm | Keep global average temperature rise <2 °C compared to pre-industrial levels | 50–80% reduction of CO2 emissions from energy use by 2050 (compared to 1990); | |
| Land-use change | Global | Maintain >75 % forest cover for critical Earth system regulating forest systems | 62 % | REDD+ | Drastically reduced, and in most regions zero expansion of agricultural land |
| Regional | Maintain 85 % rainforest, 85 % temperate forest: 50 % boreal forest | Aichi targets (17 % land ecosystems set aside as protected areas) | |||
| Global freshwater use | Global | Maximum 4000 km3 year1 of consumptive use | 2600 km3 year1 | 50 % increase in water productivity by 2030 | |
| Regional | Secure minimum volumes of environmental water flows in rivers | River basin plans | Limit to runoff withdrawals in rivers | ||
| Biosphere integrity | Global | Genetic diversity: keep extinction rate <10 E/MSY | 100–1000 E/MSY | Aichi targets | Zero loss of biodiversity in agricultural landscapes |
| Regional | Functional diversity: | Aichi targets | |||
| Interference N/P cycles | P Global | P flows from land to oceans <11 Tg P year1 (11–100 Tg P year1) | ~22 Tg P year1 | Close nutrient loops; not increase overall P use, Raise N and P use per ha in developing countries; reduce in developed countries | |
| P Regional | P flows from fertilizers to erodible soils <3.72 Tg year1 (3.72–4.84 Tg year1)—Global average but regional distribution is critical for impacts | ~14 Tg P year1 | |||
| N Global | Industrial and agricultural biological fixation of N < 44 Tg N year1 (44–62 Tg N year1) | ~150 Tg N year1 | |||
| Novel entities | Reduce loading of novel, anthropogenic chemical compounds in the biosphere | Minimze leakage of agricultural chemicals | |||
China’s dream: ecosystem function conservation areas
| China is experiencing some of the world’s most extreme challenges of environment and human development. There is now open recognition, at the highest levels of government, that environmental security is vital to national security and economic prosperity (Daily et al. |
| In support of China’s Dream, leaders are fostering intense policy innovation, pioneering new mechanisms for achieving the twin goals of securing the environment and human wellbeing. What is learned in China will have relevance everywhere. |
| Ecosystem Function Conservation Areas (EFCAs) are a new system of zoning land so as to focus conservation and restoration in places with highest return-on-investment for public benefit, to halt and reverse degradation of vital ecosystems and their life-support services, especially to poor and vulnerable people (NRDC |
| Figure showing China’s new Ecosystem Function Conservation Areas (EFCAs), zoned to protect nationally critical biodiversity and ecosystem services, and to alleviate poverty, now span 49 % of the country. The Natural Capital Project’s InVEST models were co-developed with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and are used to define the locations of EFCAs. China has invested over US$150 billion in restoring natural capital since 2000, through a suite of pioneering initiatives. Now entering a new phase of investment, over 200 million people are being paid to perform restoration and conservation activities. Figure courtesy of H. Zheng and Z. Ouyang, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences (MEP & CAS |
| EFCAs are also a way of focusing poverty alleviation efforts in places where the stakes are highest, both for local residents and for distant beneficiaries of ecosystem services. EFCAs encompass rural areas in deep poverty that face great challenges in harmonizing people and nature. The government aims to change the economic structure of these regions to increase local household income while making local households’ rural livelihoods more sustainable. |
| Implementing EFCAs involves new, experimental compensation mechanisms, whereby regional beneficiaries—for example, Beijing—invest in the transformation to more sustainable livelihoods and improvements in wellbeing among the landholders producing the ecosystem services. EFCAs are expanding in both biophysical and financial terms. They spanned 27 % of the country in 2008, 40 % in 2010, and grew to 49 % of the country in 2015. Financial transfer payments increased from 6 billion Yuan RMB (to 221 counties) in 2008 to 48 billion Yuan RMB (to 512 counties) in 2014, for a total of 200 billion Yuan RMB (USD 32 billion) since inception. |
| While EFCA initiatives are driving massive scientific and policy shifts, there is still little understanding of their local costs of implementation, their success in reversing environmental degradation, or their effects on poor and vulnerable populations. The initiatives represent a new paradigm for integrating conservation and human development, in China and potentially elsewhere. Success hinges on careful testing, evaluation, and refinement. |
| Further, while the idea of a green GDP has been discussed for decades, China is the first nation to implement it. In March 2014, the Ministry of Environmental Protection of China approved reporting Gross Ecosystem Product (GEP) alongside Gross Domestic Product at all levels of government, from local to national. GEP is the total value of final ecosystem goods and services to human welfare, including production of agricultural goods, as well as generation of regulating services and cultural values (Ouyang et al. |
Smart solar pumps: a potential solution to groundwater exploitation in India
| In Karnataka, southwest India, the local electric company is required to buy back surplus solar power from farmers—similar to programs in parts of Germany, Japan, and the United States. The buyback policy, signed by Karnataka’s governor in September 2014, is consistent with recommendations to treat solar power as a ‘cash crop.’ The rationale is that if farmers can make money by selling excess power, they then will have an economic incentive to irrigate their crops efficiently, thus helping to conserve groundwater and energy use. |
| Despite inheriting the world’s largest canal irrigation network built during British colonial rule, India has become the biggest groundwater irrigation economy, with nearly 20 million electric and diesel pumps irrigating more than 67 million hectares of land a year. Heavily subsidized pumps have driven groundwater depletion in western India and other parts of the country. An unreliable electric grid, bankrupted utilities, and power theft have contributed to the problem. |
| India’s National Solar Mission, which aspires to develop 22 gigawatts of solar power by 2020, largely by constructing massive solar power plants. However, India could achieve its solar goal with 2 million solar irrigation pumps instead and “put cash in farmers’ hands” in the process. The approach that is being promoted in Karnataka is presented. This approach of selling excess electricity back into the national grid could be used elsewhere in developing and emerging economies to drive significant decreases in CO2 emissions from fossil fuels used to pump groundwater, a shift to more sustainable utilization of groundwater, as well as enhanced food security. |
| Figure addressing the challenge of over-exploited groundwater reserves in India through the co-generation of power from solar panels for pump sets to pump water for irrigation and satisfy national energy requirements in India |