Benefits and trade-offs of optimizing global land use for food, water, and carbon

Author:

Bayer Anita D.1ORCID,Lautenbach Sven23ORCID,Arneth Almut14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research, Atmospheric Environmental Research (IMK-IFU), Global Land-Ecosystem Modelling group, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany

2. Heidelberg Institute for Geoinformation Technology (HeiGIT) at Heidelberg University, 69118 Heidelberg, Germany

3. GIScience Research Group, Heidelberg University, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

4. Institute of Geography and Geoecology, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany

Abstract

Current large-scale patterns of land use reflect history, local traditions, and production costs, much more so than they reflect biophysical potential or global supply and demand for food and freshwater, or—more recently—climate change mitigation. We quantified alternative land-use allocations that consider trade-offs for these demands by combining a dynamic vegetation model and an optimization algorithm to determine Pareto-optimal land-use allocations under changing climate conditions in 2090–2099 and alternatively in 2033–2042. These form the outer bounds of the option space for global land-use transformation. Results show a potential to increase all three indicators (+83% in crop production, +8% in available runoff, and +3% in carbon storage globally) compared to the current land-use configuration, with clear land-use priority areas: Tropical and boreal forests were preserved, crops were produced in temperate regions, and pastures were preferentially allocated in semiarid grasslands and savannas. Transformations toward optimal land-use patterns would imply extensive reconfigurations and changes in land management, but the required annual land-use changes were nevertheless of similar magnitude as those suggested by established land-use change scenarios. The optimization results clearly show that large benefits could be achieved when land use is reconsidered under a “global supply” perspective with a regional focus that differs across the world’s regions in order to achieve the supply of key ecosystem services under the emerging global pressures.

Funder

European Commission

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference63 articles.

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