Key determinants of global land-use projections
Abstrak
Land use is at the core of various sustainable development goals. Long-term climate foresight studies have structured their recent analyses around five socio-economic pathways (SSPs), with consistent storylines of future macroeconomic and societal developments; however, model quantification of these scenarios shows substantial heterogeneity in land-use projections. Here we build on a recently developed sensitivity approach to identify how future land use depends on six distinct socio-economic drivers (population, wealth, consumption preferences, agricultural productivity, land-use regulation, and trade) and their interactions. Spread across models arises mostly from diverging sensitivities to long-term drivers and from various representations of land-use regulation and trade, calling for reconciliation efforts and more empirical research. Most influential determinants for future cropland and pasture extent are population and agricultural efficiency. Furthermore, land-use regulation and consumption changes can play a key role in reducing both land use and food-security risks, and need to be central elements in sustainable development strategies. There lacks model comparison of global land use change projections. Here the authors explored how different long-term drivers determine land use and food availability projections and they showed that the key determinants population growth and improvements in agricultural efficiency.
Penulis (17)
E. Stehfest
Willem-Jan van Zeist
H. Valin
P. Havlík
A. Popp
P. Kyle
A. Tabeau
D. Mason-D’Croz
T. Hasegawa
B. Bodirsky
K. Calvin
J. Doelman
S. Fujimori
Florian Humpenöder
H. Lotze-Campen
H. van Meijl
K. Wiebe
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2019
- Bahasa
- en
- Total Sitasi
- 191×
- Sumber Database
- Semantic Scholar
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41467-019-09945-w
- Akses
- Open Access ✓