Publication | Open Access
Data-driven quantification of the global water-energy-food system
100
Citations
33
References
2018
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental ImpactsEconomic AssessmentSustainable DevelopmentAgricultural EconomicsEnvironmental EconomicsWater-energy-food NexusGlobal Water-energy-foodWater WithdrawalData ScienceWef SystemFood SystemsNexus ThinkingEnergy ConsumptionEconomicsGlobal EconomiesData-driven QuantificationWater-energy NexusNational EconomiesWater ResourcesAgricultural ModelingBusinessNatural Resource EconomicsWater Consumption
There is increasing interest in the global water-energy-food (WEF) system and potential system trajectories, especially considering growing concerns over resource exploitation and sustainability. Previous studies investigating different aspects of this system have a number of shortcomings, meaning it is difficult to identify system-wide tradeoffs, and makes comparison difficult. A global analysis of the WEF system linked to gross domestic product (GDP) growth is presented, integrating the four sectors into a coherent analysis and modelling framework. GDP was included as previous related work demonstrates a link between GDP and each WEF sector. A system dynamics modelling approach quantifies previously qualitative descriptions of the global WEF-GDP system, while a Monte-Carlo sampling approach is adopted to characterise national-level variability in resource use. Correlative and causal analysis show links of varying strength between sectors. For example, the GDP-electricity consumption sectors are strongly correlated while food production and electricity consumption are weakly correlated. Causal analysis reveals that ‘correlation does not imply causation’. There are noticeable asymmetries in causality between certain sectors. Historical WEF-GDP values are well recreated. Future scenarios were assessed using seven GDP growth estimates to 2100. Water withdrawals in 2100 and food production in 2050 are close to other estimations. Results suggest that humanity risks exceeding the ‘safe operating space’ for water withdrawal. Reducing water withdrawal while maintaining or increasing food production is critical, and should be decoupled from economic growth. This work provides a quantitative modelling framework to previously qualitative descriptions of the WEF-GDP system, offering a platform on which to build.
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