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Статья

The Global Food‐Energy‐Water Nexus

Paolo D’OdoricoDepartment of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California Berkeley CA USAKyle Frankel DavisThe Earth Institute Columbia University New York NY USALorenzo RosaDepartment of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California Berkeley CA USAJoel A. CarrPatuxent Wildlife Research Center U.S. Geological Survey Beltsville MD USADavide Danilo ChiarelliDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering Politecnico di Milano Milan ItalyJampel Dell’AngeloDepartment of Environmental Policy Analysis, Institute for Environmental Studies Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamJessica A. GephartNational Socio‐Environmental Synthesis Center Annapolis MD USAGraham K. MacDonaldDepartment of Geography McGill University Montreal Quebec CanadaDavid A. SeekellDepartment of Ecology and Environmental Sciences Umeå University Umeå SwedenSamir SuweisDepartment of Physics ‘G. Galilei’ University of Padova Padua ItalyMaria Cristina RulliDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering Politecnico di Milano Milan Italy
2018en
ABI

Аннотация

Abstract Water availability is a major factor constraining humanity's ability to meet the future food and energy needs of a growing and increasingly affluent human population. Water plays an important role in the production of energy, including renewable energy sources and the extraction of unconventional fossil fuels that are expected to become important players in future energy security. The emergent competition for water between the food and energy systems is increasingly recognized in the concept of the “food‐energy‐water nexus.” The nexus between food and water is made even more complex by the globalization of agriculture and rapid growth in food trade, which results in a massive virtual transfer of water among regions and plays an important role in the food and water security of some regions. This review explores multiple components of the food‐energy‐water nexus and highlights possible approaches that could be used to meet food and energy security with the limited renewable water resources of the planet. Despite clear tensions inherent in meeting the growing and changing demand for food and energy in the 21st century, the inherent linkages among food, water, and energy systems can offer an opportunity for synergistic strategies aimed at resilient food, water, and energy security, such as the circular economy.

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