| Literature DB >> 30598034 |
Ming-Che Hu1, Chihhao Fan2, Tailin Huang3, Chi-Fang Wang4, Yu-Hui Chen5.
Abstract
Urban metabolism analyzes the supply and consumption of nutrition, material, energy, and other resources within cities. Food, water, and energy are critical resources for the human society and have complicated cooperative/competitive influences on each other. The management of interactive resources is essential for supply chain analysis. This research analyzes the food-water-energy system of urban metabolism for sustainable resources management. A system dynamics model is established to investigate the urban metabolism of food, water, and energy resources. This study conducts a case study of Shihmen Reservoir system, hydropower generation, paddy rice irrigation of Taoyuan and Shihmen Irrigation Associations, and water consumption in Taoyuan, New Taipei, and Hsinchu cities. The interactive influence of the food-water-energy nexus is quantified in this study; the uncertainty analysis of food, water, and energy nexus is presented.Entities:
Keywords: food-water-energy; system dynamics simulation; urban metabolism
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30598034 PMCID: PMC6338940 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16010090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Urban metabolic analysis of food, water, and energy resources systems.
Figure 2Shihmen Reservoir and Dahan River.
Figure 3System dynamics simulation of food-water-energy system for urban metabolic analysis.
Uncertain simulation of water inflow, outflow, storage, and hydropower of the Shihmen Reservoir.
| Uncertainty | Water Inflow | Water Outflow | Water Storage | Hydropower |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total (Standard Deviation) | Total (Standard Deviation) | Mean (Standard Deviation) | Mean (Standard Deviation) | |
| million m3 | million m3 | million m3 | MWh | |
| 5% | 776.13 | 773.61 | 124.82 | 322,338 |
| (4.92) | (15.60) | (15.57) | (6499) | |
| 10% | 785.45 | 789.23 | 133.36 | 328,846 |
| (5.35) | (17.72) | (19.81) | (7384) | |
| 15% | 817.02 | 787.63 | 150.95 | 328,181 |
| (7.10) | (19.17) | (15.30) | (7988) | |
| 20% | 764.54 | 754.18 | 135.54 | 314,241 |
| (5.82) | (14.16) | (13.06) | (5900) | |
| 25% | 759.71 | 820.12 | 59.62 | 341,717 |
| (12.27) | (22.75) | (36.85) | (9479) | |
| 30% | 763.26 | 776.79 | 108.59 | 323,662 |
| (12.55) | (16.74) | (21.53) | (6975) | |
| 35% | 759.14 | 759.88 | 143.83 | 316,616 |
| (16.49) | (18.18) | (19.40) | (7576) | |
| 40% | 834.72 | 754.82 | 121.33 | 314,510 |
| (15.68) | (24.33) | (39.35) | (10,136) |
Figure 4Simulation results of water storage in the Shihmen Reservoir under 10% uncertainty of water inflow.
Figure 5Simulation of water storage in the Shihmen Reservoir under 20% uncertainty of water inflow.
Figure 6Simulation of water storage in the Shihmen Reservoir under 30% uncertainty of water inflow.