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Energy Systems and Ecosystem Services; a emerging research agenda Dan van der Horst School of Geography, Earth & Environmental Sciences University of Birmingham – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy%20Systems%20and%20Ecosystem%20Services;%20a%20emerging%20research%20agenda


1
Energy Systems and Ecosystem Services a emerging
research agenda
  • Dan van der Horst
  • School of Geography, Earth Environmental
    Sciences
  • University of Birmingham
  • 25/02/2013



2
structure
  • Ecosystem Services the basics
  • My research on land use change (LUC)
  • Reflections on natural resource management in
    the 21st century
  • My research on low carbon communities
  • Emerging research agenda Ecosystem Based
    Development

3
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA)
  • Launched in 2000 by the then UN Secretary General
    Kofi Annand, who stated that there has never
    been a comprehensive global assessment of the
    worlds major ecosystems.
  • MEA is designed to provide decision-makers with
    information to manage ecosystems in a more
    sustainable manner that will maintain both
    biodiversity and the ecosystem services that are
    essential to human well-being (HWB).

4
Key definitions
  • Ecosystem. An ecosystem is a dynamic complex of
    plant, animal, and microorganism communities and
    the nonliving environment interacting as a
    functional unit. Humans are an integral part of
    ecosystems. Ecosystems vary enormously in size a
    temporary pond in a tree hollow and an ocean
    basin can both be ecosystems.
  • Ecosystem services. Ecosystem services are the
    benefits people obtain from ecosystems. These
    include provisioning services such as food and
    water regulating services such as regulation of
    floods, drought, land degradation, and disease
    supporting services such as soil formation and
    nutrient cycling and cultural services such as
    recreational, spiritual, religious and other
    nonmaterial benefits.
  • Well-being. Human well-being has multiple
    constituents, including basic material for a good
    life, freedom and choice, health, good social
    relations, and security. Wellbeing is at the
    opposite end of a continuum from poverty, which
    has been defined as a pronounced deprivation in
    well-being. The constituents of well-being, as
    experienced and perceived by people, are
    situation-dependent, reflecting local geography,
    culture, and ecological circumstances.

5
MEA background
  • Involvement of governments, the private sector,
    nongovernmental organizations, and scientists
  • An interdisciplinary project, involving thousands
    of scientists from across the world
  • Aimed to provide an integrated assessment of the
    consequences of ecosystem change for human
    well-being and to analyze options available to
    enhance the conservation of ecosystems and their
    contributions to meeting human needs.
  • Should help to inform the implementation of UN
    conventions such as The Convention on Biological
    Diversity, the Convention to Combat
    Desertification, the Convention on Migratory
    Species, and the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.
  • It should also help to achieve the United Nations
    Millennium Development Goals and to carry out the
    Plan of Implementation of the 2002 World Summit
    on Sustainable Development.
  • Supposed to identify areas of broad scientific
    agreement and also point to areas of continuing
    scientific debate.

6
MEA 5 overarching research questions
  1. Conditions trends to date?
  2. Likely future changes?
  3. What we can do to enhance well-being ESHWB?
  4. What do and dont we know about ESHWB and how
    do we deal with such uncertainties in our
    policies?
  5. What tools and methods do we have/need to assess
    ESHWB, and policies to protect or enhance these

7
About the MEA conditions trends to date
  • How do ecosystems contribute to human well-being?
  • How have ecosystems changed and how has this
    increased or reduced their capacity to contribute
    to human well-being?
  • Thresholds, regime shifts, irreversible changes?
  • Critical factors affecting the observed changes?
  • Costs, benefits and risks associated with
    observed changes and how are these distributed
    over space and over sectors of society?

8
(No Transcript)
9
  • Provisioning services (use values) are
    characterised by public accessibility and by the
    availability of substitute resources. For
    example, the recreational use value of a woodland
    depends, inter alia, on how many people can
    access that woodland and how many other woodlands
    substitute sites are available to these people.
  • Cultural services (non-use values) also relate
    to accessibility and substitute sites but more in
    a conceptual rather than a literal sense as many
    examples of non-use values, particularly those
    ones that do not require physical access, are
    non-exclusive and non-rival. In other words,
    their enjoyment by one person does not
    necessarily limit or diminish another persons
    ability to access and enjoy this service through
    exclusion or consumptive diminishment.
  • Regulating services (protection values) refer
    to indirect (conservation) use values related to
    the ability of ecosystems to mitigate the impacts
    of antropogenic emissions or natural phenomena.

10
Ecosystem Service cascade (Haines-Young
Potschin, 2009)
11
Assessment methods are complementary
co-dependent
  • Functional or biophysical assessment Social
    assessment Valuation

12
Back to my own research(on Land Use Change)
13
Generic model for assessing LUC drivers, patterns
and processes
Theory
Drivers For LUC (market, Policy, CC)
Fieldwork to understand process behind patterns
Patterns found
Pattern Analysis
LUC data
Methods used - Pattern analysis GIS, RS,
Stats - Fieldwork participant observation, div
qual methods, questionnaires biophysical
surveys/sampling
14
Case study of windfarm approval patterns (van der
Horst Toke, 2010)
Theory (env. justice social capital)
Wind Energy policy
Wind farms Approved/ rejected
Patterns found
Pattern analysis
15
Case study on farmer uptake of a PES scheme (van
der Horst, 2011)
Theory (Innovation diffusion as a
spatio-temporal process)
Data of Farmers joining
ESA PES scheme
Patterns found
Pattern analysis
Cummulative uptake over time
16
Case study of village ecology jatropha curcas
(in progress)
Theory/Hypothesis (speculationMarx?)
Drivers For LUC (historic jatropha hype)
Fieldwork (ground truthing)
village Tree cover (RS)
Patterns found
Pattern analysis
17
Reflections 1Human nature relationship
  • unspoiled nature is a human construct
  • We are not external to nature
  • we are shaping our ecosystem and this changed
    ecosystem is shaping us (health, wellbeing..).
    This is a feedback loop
  • We should shape our ecosystem in a smarter way,
    creating a positive feedback loop.

18
Reflections 2Technology ecology
  • Technology allowed us to become the most invasive
    of all species, occupying all ecosystems.
  • From crude technology to Biomimicry.
  • From technology to extract ES and protect these
    against competition
  • To technology to restore lost ES (e.g.
    geo-engineering)

19
Reflections 3Geological irony
  • We mine fossil fuels (accumulated ecosystem
    services)
  • And that energy gives us the power to act as a
    geological force Anthropocene.
  • Now we are running low on (cheap cleanish)
    fossil fuels
  • Now we need to invest in infrastructure to adapt
    to climate change which we have created (requires
    more energy..)

20
Why do we create externalities?
  • (assuming that we are not bad people assuming
    that we are not very poor)
  • Bad impact is in a place far away
  • Bad impact is in a time far away
  • Bad impact is diffuse
  • Bad impact has multiple causes
  • Bad impact is (otherwise) invisible
  • Globalisation as externalisation through space

21
Wrong national boundaries, sectoral boundaries,
zoning, property regime
  • Redraw boundaries (national, sectoral) through
    institutional reform
  • Redraw property relations through commodification
    of nature
  • Change Agents ICT revolution (making divisible
    what is invisible), shifts in economic landscape,
    public opinion?

22
Principles of Adaptive Management?
  • Build resilience in infrastructure redundancy
    (back-up) contingency (plan B) recovery
  • Increase storage
  • Diversify supplies
  • Avoid new bad lock-in (high energy/dirty
    energy)
  • No blanket approach Find/use local synergies
  • Shorter supply-demand feedback loops
  • Soft measures 1 reduce demand
  • Soft measures 2 dev./support coping strategies
  • Accept experiments learning by doing
  • Shared knowledge, decisions, learning

23
Cultural lock-in from our industrial past the
pastoral myth
  • The open countryside space is portrayed as a
    space of consumption in which ramblers walk and
    walk freely experiencing peace and quiet and
    spectacular scenery. The lands value lies not in
    its productive activity, but as an escape for
    city-dwellers, as somewhere to reconnect with
    nature, and to inspire art, literature and music
    (Woods, 2003, p 285).

24
Back to my own research again(on low carbon
communities)
25
Renewable Energy development as a form of smart
(re)localisation
  • Linking production and consumption (no
    sustainable consumption without sustainable
    production)
  • Linking production to social impacts (impacts of
    the production process impacts of energy
    services provided)
  • Linking people and organisations through a supply
    chain or a grid (power relations shift with
    distance, connectivity, directionality)
  • Community building?

26
Community as a focus for collective action in RE
deployment
  • Broad research area since Tonnies Gemeinschaft
    und Gesellschaft.
  • To what extent can socio-technical transition to
    a low carbon society be understood in terms of
    (lack of) collective or community action?
  • What examples/types of low carbon munities are
    there?
  • What collective resources are being mobilised?
  • How are these being mobilised? (process?)
  • Giving these observations, what can we expect for
    the future? (mainstreaming?)

27
Locating low carbon communities
Island community
Intentional community
place
scale
Virtual community
Interest (culture, value etc)
bowling alone?
28
Community (trans)formation engagement with RE
Community of place
Westray?
e.g. eco-village
e.g. threat to back-yard (greentrified?)
Community of practice
Community of interest
Innovation-diffusion, Capacity building
e.g. consumer Co-ops urban Wind co-ops
e.g. veggie vans Solar guerrillas off-gridders
Virtual Community
29
Intentional green community Findhorn
30
Left Selling green electricityBelow Selling
green technology (solar water heaters)
31
But we also have depleted communities
  • communities where the economy is in decline
    and the resources of the area, according to
    profit-seeking capital, are used up. However,
    depleted communities are more than simply
    locations that lack growth mechanisms they are
    also areas to which people retain an attachment.
    A depleted community, therefore, continues to
    exist as a social entity because it is shaped by
    positive social forces as well as by negative
    economic forces. While the economic signals are
    for people to move, the ties to community, the
    emotional bonds and the social benefits of living
    there create a powerful resistance to leaving. A
    depleted community, therefore, maintains a strong
    and active network of social relations.
    (Johnstone and Lionais, 2004, p. 217)
  • Ex-mining (Barnsley, Kirklees) - Remote rural
    (Westray, Unst)

32
(Island) Westray
  • Biodiesel from waste cooking oil
  • Electric car (converted), charged by a wind
    turbine
  • Wind to heat (kirk, youth centre, care centre)
  • GSHP (now standard for new houses)
  • Farm digester
  • Community wind farm
  • Biomass boiler for cardboard
  • Aim carbon neutral by 2012

33
Capitalist production develops technology, and
the combining together of various processes into
a social whole, only by sapping the original
sources of all wealth - the soil and the
labourer (Marx)
inputs Slurry Grass Paper Crab shells
Concept of Shared Value (Michael Porter)
outputs Domestic heat Electricity for
grid Fertiliser for land
Digester
Outcomes Lower heating bills Income for farmers,
income for biogas company Drink water quality
improvement Local sustainable waste
disposal Cost avoidance for local fish processing
plant Reduced GHG emissions
34
Towards Ecosystem Based Development?
  • Extends from ecosystem based management
  • Work with nature (not develop OR conserve)
  • Work to scale (disecologies of scale)
  • Create shared value (more than just avoiding
    externalities)
  • See human activities and technologies as part of
    nature (anthropocene, biomimicry)
  • Challenging paradigms Positive lock-in
    transaction benefits value of redundancy
    learning-from-failure as a public good
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