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Proceeding Paper

Modelling the Water-Energy-Food-Land Use-Climate Nexus: The Nexus Tree Approach †

by
Chrysi S. Laspidou
1,*,
Dimitrios T. Kofinas
1,
Nikolaos K. Mellios
1 and
Maria Witmer
2
1
Department of Civil Engineering, University of Thessaly, 38334 Volos, Greece
2
Department of Water, Agriculture and Food, PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, 2594 AV The Hague, The Netherlands
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Presented at the 3rd EWaS International Conference on “Insights on the Water-Energy-Food Nexus”, Lefkada Island, Greece, 27–30 June 2018.
Proceedings 2018, 2(11), 617; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2110617
Published: 6 August 2018
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of EWaS3 2018)

Abstract

:
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has established the Water-Energy-Food Nexus, implying that the three commodities are inextricably linked forming a complex system of interrelations. Perceiving water, energy and food as a system variable with dependencies rather than a singularity suggests an approach of a more holistic view that can offer a sustainable plan for managing resources. In this article, the already established three-way Nexus is expanded to include two more dimensions, namely land use and climate and a framework for modelling the interlinkages among these dimensions is presented.

1. Introduction

The concept of integrated management of natural resources has been in use for years; however, the complex interlinkages and interdependencies amongst individual resources are still not clearly defined, creating difficulties in the development and implementation of this concept [1]. As a result, responding to a challenge in the management of one resource, such as water, often creates challenges for the management of others, such as energy, or food. The collective and integrated management of these resources using a Nexus approach should be used to increase resource-use efficiency and minimize environmental risks and ecological degradation [2]. Even though the Nexus concept has been present in the sustainable development rhetoric for a few decades, it has only gathered a lot of attention within scientific and policy disciplines over the last ten years [3], especially including the interactions across the Water-Energy and Water-Energy-Food domains [4], which become critical as the pressures of population growth and climate change increase. Lately, the Nexus concept has been expanding to also include other resources [5], commodities and/or disciplines, such as land use, soil, waste, climate, economy, ecosystems, health and others, making the Nexus even more multi-dimensional and interdisciplinary. New innovative tools, such as a serious game, are being developed to make the Nexus concept more accessible and comprehensible by policy-makers and citizens alike, through innovative participatory processes and following a bottom-up approach [6]. Circular economy, resource efficiency and sustainability issues are at the centre of the Nexus. As resources are tightly interlinked and the use of one requires the presence of the other (e.g., the production of energy requires water and the production of food requires water and energy), resource use encompasses complex interactions and potential conflicts among Nexus dimensions. This article presents a modelling framework for these interactions, aiming at establishing a methodology for its further analysis. Depending on the number of Nexus dimensions considered, such analysis could become quite complex, even chaotic at times; therefore, a systematic framework that addresses the complexity of interactions within the Nexus is needed.

2. Materials and Methods

In the context of the Horizon 2020 research and innovation project entitled SIM4NEXUS [7] funded by the European Commission, the complex network of interlinkages of five Nexus domains is investigated: Water, Land Use, Food, Energy and Climate. Defining the five Nexus domains reveals the useful aspects taken into account in the analysis and sets the framework on which the analysis is developed.
Water is:
  • The water system, hydrological cycle, habitat for species, aquatic ecosystem, with characteristics such as discharge patterns, water level, morphology of water body, precipitation and evapotranspiration patterns, chemical and ecological quality and aquatic biodiversity.
  • A natural resource, water use for all sorts of human needs, with quantity and quality, emissions, discharges, withdrawal and consumption, water footprint. Water quantity and quality are affected by human use, either on purpose—water management—or as a (negative) side effect.
  • Itself as a geographical phenomenon, including lines (canals and rivers) and surfaces/areas that may be inter-connected and are used for transport and offer room for activities.
Land is:
4
The land and soil system, with its cycles of nutrients and organic matter, habitat for species, terrestrial ecosystems, with characteristics e.g., soil type, slope and terrestrial biodiversity.
5
A natural resource, land use, with quantity and quality intensity and land footprint. Land and soil are affected by human use, either on purpose—land management, agriculture—or as a (negative) side effect, e.g., erosion and degradation, sealing, salinization.
6
Itself as a geographical phenomenon, ‘room’ for living, acting and transport e.g., urbanization, industrial areas, roads, including spatial planning.
Food is, by definition, a socio-economic domain, with:
7
Food production, primary (agriculture) and secondary (industrial food processing)
8
Food consumption
9
Both food production and consumption are connected through supply chains, trade, markets, prices & price volatility.
Energy is, by definition, a socio-economic domain, with:
Energy production, primary & mining, secondary e.g., coal into electricity
Energy consumption
Both energy production and consumption are connected through energy transformation from one form to another, supply chains and networks, trade, markets, prices.
Climate is the long-term pattern of the weather. Climate and weather should not be mixed up: There is an actual climate and climate change, the latter being the change in long-term weather patterns. Climate is affected by greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations in the atmosphere, in its turn influenced by GHG emissions and storage. The other way round, climate change influences all other Nexus components. Climate change is connected to the other nexus components by:
  • Climate change mitigation, reducing the emissions and increasing the storage of greenhouse gases (GHG), expressed as CO2 equivalents, by water and land management, energy and food production.
  • Adaptation of water and land management, energy and food production to changing long-term weather patterns.
Water, Energy, Food, Land Use and Climate, the five Nexus components are related to one another, through a number of direct and indirect interlinkages (Figure 1a). A direct interlinkage between two components (e.g., Water and Energy) is defined as the effect in a component’s status (e.g., Energy), caused by a change in the other component’s status (e.g., Water), assuming that the rest of the components (e.g., Food, Land Use or Climate) remain constant and do not interfere with the status of these two components. For this example, a change in Water (ΔW), such as reduced availability of fresh water, will cause a shift in energy (ΔE), by limiting the available cooling water and leading to possible brown-outs or black-outs. This is one of various direct ways that a shift in Water (ΔW) would cause a shift in Energy. This is referred to as the Water-Energy direct interlinkage and is denoted as W→E, or simpler as WE; it comprises all the ways that a change in water, including water quality, quantity, temperature, etc. can affect Energy. It should be noted that each direct interlinkage is unique and the interlinkage of opposite direction is a different one; thus, WE is a different interlinkage to EW. The latter includes the effect that a change in Energy can cause in Water, which is completely different than the opposite. According to this framework, the unique direct interlinkages of the Nexus dimensions sum up to 20. Those 20 interlinkages are presented schematically in Figure 1b and are listed below:
  • Water: WF, WC, WL, WE
  • Energy: EW, EC, EF, EL
  • Land Use: LE, LC, LW, LF
  • Climate: CL, CE, CW, CF
  • Food: FC, FL, FE, FW

3. Results and Discussion

The direct interlinkages described above are considered as 1st order interlinkages. Except for these twenty direct interlinkages, one Nexus component may also affect another through indirect interlinkages. This means that a change in one Nexus component can cause a change to another component through a change in a third component. To model higher-order interlinkages, three-, four- and five-letter acronyms are used depending on the number of components interacting. For example, to describe the changes caused to Water by an initial change in Food, through the Climate component, the FCW acronym is used. This would be a 2nd order interlinkage. Similarly, Food → Climate → Energy → Water (FCEW) would describe a 3rd order interlinkage and Food → Climate → Energy → Land Use → Water (FCELW) would describe a 4th order interlinkage. An example of the fourth order indirect interlinkage FLWEC would be the following: An increase in Food production would cause a change in Land Use, namely more land would have to be converted to agricultural land. Such a change in Land Use would result to an increase in agricultural Water demand, thus affecting the Water domain. Such a change in Water would cause an increase in Energy demand for pumping; this change would be more pronounced if water comes from groundwater and will increase as pumping depths increase. The Energy change would in turn result in a change in Climate, i.e., an increase in GHG emissions, especially in the case of fossil fuels.
It should be noted that, as described in this FLWEC example, only the linear one-to-one relationships of Nexus components are considered in these higher order interlinkages. Thus, a change in Food would cause changes not only in Land Use (FL in FLWEC), but also in Water (FW), Energy (FE) and/or Climate (FC). However, we do not consider these other Food interlinkages; the effect on Water is only considered through Land Use (LW in FLWEC) and similarly the effect on Energy only through Water (WE in FLWEC) and the effect on Climate only through Energy (EC in FLWEC).
In order to define and record the numerous different influence pathways of different orders, the Nexus tree for one of the Nexus dimensions is designed (Water is used as an example, shown in Figure 2). The Nexus tree is the schematic depiction of all different pathways that lead to various effects caused by a single change in one of the components. An initial single change in the central Nexus dimension causes corresponding changes in the other Nexus components through the branches of the Nexus tree. Specifically, for the Nexus tree for Water shown in Figure 2, we first see all four first-order connections (WC, WE, WF and WL), signifying how a change in Water can affect Climate, Energy, Food and Land Use, respectively. Moving on to the second-order links, we see that three branches are formed out of each one of the four Nexus components (C, E, F and L), since the link with Water has already been taken into account (first-order connection). This way, Climate is linked to Energy, Food and Land Use; Energy is linked to Climate, Food and Land Use; Food is linked to Climate, Energy and Land Use and Land Use is linked to Climate, Energy and Food. As we move out to level 3, the number of branches out of each Nexus component is now two, while at level 4, only one branch forms out of each Nexus component. This way, we ensure that each pathway, when followed from the centre all the way to the end of the tree as it branches out, will not repeat a Nexus component, but will have a unique combination of all five Nexus components. A total of 24 unique combinations are shown in this Nexus tree, which has Water at its centre; these are the following: WCLFE, WCFLE, WCELF, WCLEF, WCFEL, WCEFL, WELFC, WEFLC, WECLF, WELCF, WEFCL, WECFL, WFLEC, WFELC, WFCLE, WFLCE, WFECL, WFCEL, WLFEC, WLEFC, WLCFE, WLFCE, WLECF, WLCEF. Similar Nexus trees can be constructed with the other four Nexus components at their centres, namely, Energy, Land Use, Food and Climate; thus, the total number of unique fourth order interlinkages for the whole Nexus is 24 × 5 = 120.
Following this analysis, it is possible to define all ways through which one Nexus component affects another. In this work, we will show an example for how a change in Water affects Land Use, using the Nexus tree approach: We define all first-, second-, third- and fourth-order interlinkages that have Water as a starting point and Land Use as the final point. This is shown in Figure 3, in which we repeat the Nexus tree shown in Figure 2, having eliminated all pathways that do not involve Land Use. The result is a set of 16 pathways: WL, WEL, WFL, WCL, WEFL, WECL, WFEL, WFCL, WCEL, WCFL, WEFCL, WECFL, WFECL, WFCEL, WCEFL and WCFEL and includes all direct and indirect ways that a change in Water can affect Land Use. When quantitative modelling is conducted and all coupled pathways can actually be quantified, then the total influence that a change in Water will have on Land Use will be the sum of all direct and indirect quantities, as shown below. Naturally, some higher order interlinkages might not be significant and will eventually drop out, allowing for the more significant ones to dominate the total effect that Water has on Land Use. A Table that lists all interlinkages for all Nexus components following the Nexus tree approach is included in the Appendix A.
The Nexus tree approach creates a depiction of the chain of interlinkages and can be used to guide modellers in a step-by-step approach to systematically assess a simulation without leaving out any direct or indirect interrelation. It outlines the architecture of the Nexus modelling framework, which, at this stage, does not take into account any feedback loops, which could be important, depending on the circumstances. For example, a change in Water drives a corresponding change in Energy (WE), which could in turn drive further change in Water (EW) and another change in Energy and so on. This feedback loop, W → E → W → E → … could lead to changes with a multiplicative effect, magnifying the effects that one Nexus component has on the other, or could dissipate changes, leading to a steady state. Whichever the case might be, the Nexus tree modelling framework presented herein has the limitation of not including such feedback loops; an extensive Nexus modelling framework should definitely include them in the analysis, especially when there is evidence that they are important.

Author Contributions

C.L. conceived the concept of the Nexus tree approach; C.L., D.K. and N.M. worked together to refine it; M.W. contributed in the Materials and Methods, by providing definitions for Nexus components; C.L. wrote the paper with input from D.K. and N.M.; M.W. reviewed the paper.

Acknowledgments

The work described in this paper has been conducted within the project SIM4NEXUS. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 689150 SIM4NEXUS. This paper and the content included in it do not represent the opinion of the European Union, and the European Union is not responsible for any use that might be made of its content.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. List of 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th degree pathways for all different Nexus interlinkages.
Table A1. List of 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th degree pathways for all different Nexus interlinkages.
ClimateEnergyFoodLandWater
Climate to WaterCW
CEW
CFW
CLW
CELW
CEFW
CFEW
CFLW
CLEW
CLFW
CEFLW
CELFW
CFELW
CFLEW
CLFEW
CLEFW
Energy to WaterEW
ELW
EFW
ECW
ELFW
ELCW
ECLW
ECFW
EFLW
EFCW
ECFLW
ECLFW
EFCLW
EFLCW
ELCFW
ELFCW
Food to WaterFW
FLW
FCW
FEW
FLEW
FLCW
FCLW
FCEW
FECW
FELW
FCELW
FCLEW
FECLW
FELCW
FLCEW
FLECW
Land to WaterLW
LEW
LCW
LFW
LECW
LEFW
LCEW
LCFW
LFEW
LFCW
LCEFW
LCFEW
LECFW
LEFCW
LFCEW
LFECW
Water to LandWL
WEL
WFL
WCL
WEFL
WECL
WFEL
WFCL
WCEL
WCFL
WFLCE
WFCLE
WLFCE
WLCFE
WCLFE
WCFLE
Climate to LandCL
CEL
CFL
CWL
CEFL
CFEL
CEWL
CFWL
CWEL
CWFL
CEFWL
CEWFL
CFEWL
CFWEL
CWEFL
CWFEL
Energy to LandEL
EWL
EFL
ECL
EWFL
EWCL
EFWL
EFCL
ECWL
ECFL
EWFCL
EWCFL
EFCWL
EFWCL
ECWFL
ECFWL
Food to LandFL
FEL
FWL
FCL
FEWL
FECL
FCWL
FCEL
FWEL
FWCL
FCEWL
FCWEL
FECWL
FEWCL
FWCEL
FWECL
Land to FoodLF
LEF
LWF
LCF
LEWF
LECF
LWEF
LWCF
LCWF
LCEF
LCEWF
LCWEF
LECWF
LEWCF
LWCEF
LWECF
Water to FoodWF
WCF
WEF
WLF
WCEF
WCLF
WECF
WELF
WLEF
WLCF
WELCF
WECLF
WLECF
WLCEF
WCLEF
WCELF
Climate to EnergyCE
CFE
CWE
CLE
CFLE
CFWE
CWLE
CWFE
CLFE
CLWE
CFLWE
CFWLE
CLWFE
CWLFE
CWFLE
CLFWE
Energy to ClimateEC
ELC
EFC
EWC
ELFC
ELWC
EFWC
EFLC
ELFC
ELWC
ELFWC
ELWFC
EFWLC
EFLWC
EWFLC
EWLFC
Food to ClimateFC
FEC
FWC
FLC
FELC
FEWC
FWEC
FWLC
FLWC
FLEC
FELWC
FEWLC
FLEWC
FLWEC
FWLEC
FWELC
Land to ClimateLC
LEC
LWC
LFC
LEWC
LEFC
LWEC
LWFC
LFWC
LFEC
LEFWC
LEWFC
LFWEC
LWEFC
LWFEC
LFEWC
Water to ClimateWC
WEC
WFC
WLC
WEFC
WELC
WFEC
WFLC
WLEC
WLFC
WELFC
WEFLC
WFLEC
WFELC
WLEFC
WLFEC
Climate to FoodCF
CEF
CWF
CLF
CELF
CEWF
CWEF
CWLF
CELF
CEWF
CEWLF
CELWF
CLEWF
CLWEF
CWLEF
CWELF
Energy to FoodEF
ELF
ECF
EWF
ELCF
ELWF
ECLF
ECWF
EWLF
EWCF
EWLCF
EWCLF
ELWCF
ELCWF
ECWLF
ECLWF
Food to EnergyFE
FLE
FCE
FWE
FLCE
FLWE
FCLE
FCWE
FWLE
FWCE
FCWLE
FCLWE
FLCWE
FLWCE
FWLCE
FWCLE
Land to EnergyLE
LFE
LWE
LCE
LFWE
LFCE
LWCE
LWFE
LCFE
LCWE
LCFWE
LCWFE
LFECW
LFWCE
LWCFE
LWFCE
Water to EnergyWE
WFE
WCE
WLE
WFLE
WFCE
WCFE
WCLE
WLFE
WLCE
WFLCE
WFCLE
WLFCE
WLCFE
WCLFE
WCFLE

References

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Figure 1. (a) Nexus component interlinkages, showing all interrelations between different Nexus components; (b) Schematic of Nexus component interlinkages, showing how each one of the five Nexus components relate to the other four.
Figure 1. (a) Nexus component interlinkages, showing all interrelations between different Nexus components; (b) Schematic of Nexus component interlinkages, showing how each one of the five Nexus components relate to the other four.
Proceedings 02 00617 g001
Figure 2. Nexus tree for Water showing the formation of all 24 unique fourth-order interlinkages. Similar trees can be created for all five Nexus dimensions (W, E, F, L, C), creating a total of 120 unique fourth-order interlinkages for the five-dimensional Nexus.
Figure 2. Nexus tree for Water showing the formation of all 24 unique fourth-order interlinkages. Similar trees can be created for all five Nexus dimensions (W, E, F, L, C), creating a total of 120 unique fourth-order interlinkages for the five-dimensional Nexus.
Proceedings 02 00617 g002
Figure 3. Nexus tree for Water to Land Use, showing the formation of all 16 direct and indirect pathways by which a change in Water can bring about a change in Land Use.
Figure 3. Nexus tree for Water to Land Use, showing the formation of all 16 direct and indirect pathways by which a change in Water can bring about a change in Land Use.
Proceedings 02 00617 g003
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MDPI and ACS Style

Laspidou, C.S.; Kofinas, D.T.; Mellios, N.K.; Witmer, M. Modelling the Water-Energy-Food-Land Use-Climate Nexus: The Nexus Tree Approach. Proceedings 2018, 2, 617. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2110617

AMA Style

Laspidou CS, Kofinas DT, Mellios NK, Witmer M. Modelling the Water-Energy-Food-Land Use-Climate Nexus: The Nexus Tree Approach. Proceedings. 2018; 2(11):617. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2110617

Chicago/Turabian Style

Laspidou, Chrysi S., Dimitrios T. Kofinas, Nikolaos K. Mellios, and Maria Witmer. 2018. "Modelling the Water-Energy-Food-Land Use-Climate Nexus: The Nexus Tree Approach" Proceedings 2, no. 11: 617. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2110617

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