Affiliation:
1. University of Vermont, School of Environment & Natural Resources, Burlington, VT, USA
2. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, USA
3. Northeastern University, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, Boston, MA, USA
Abstract
Intersections of food, energy, and water systems (also termed as the FEW nexus) pose many sustainability and governance challenges for urban areas, including risks to ecosystems, inequitable distribution of benefits and harms across populations, and reliance on distant sources for food, energy, and water. This case study provides an integrated assessment of the FEW nexus at the city and regional scale in ten contiguous counties encompassing the rapidly growing Denver region in the United States. Spatial patterns in FEW consumption, production, trans-boundary flows, embodied FEW inputs, and impacts on FEW systems were assessed using an urban systems framework for the trans-boundary food-energy-water nexus. The Denver region is an instructive case study of the FEW nexus for multiple reasons: it is rapidly growing, is semi-arid, faces a large projected water shortfall, and is a major fossil fuel and agricultural producer. The rapid uptake of high-volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) combined with horizontal drilling in populated areas poses ongoing risks to regional water quality. Through this case study, fracking is identified as a major topic for FEW nexus inquiry, with intensifying impacts on water quantity and quality that reflect nationwide trends. Key data gaps are also identified, including energy for water use and food preparation. This case study is relevant to water and sustainability planners, energy regulators, communities impacted by hydraulic fracturing, and consumers of energy and food produced in the Denver region. It is applicable beyond Denver to dry areas with growing populations, agricultural activity, and the potential for shale development.
Publisher
University of California Press
Reference65 articles.
1. Global climate change and confronting the challenges of food security;Productivity,2016
2. UN-Water. Water, Food and Energy [Internet]. UN-Water. [cited 14 September 2018]. Available: http://www.unwater.org/water-facts/water-food-and-energy/.
3. Barber NL. Summary of Estimated Water Use in the United States in 2010. U.S. Geological Survey; 2014.
4. An urban systems framework to assess the trans-boundary food-energy-water nexus: implementation in Delhi, India;Environ Res Lett,2017
5. United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Reconciling Resource Uses in Transboundary Basins: Assessment of the Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystems Nexus. United Nations; 2015.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献