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The water-energy-food nexus: Trade-offs,thresholds and transdisciplinary approaches to sustainable development
Affiliation:1. Texas A&M System, College Station, TX, USA;2. University of New Haven, West Haven, CT, USA;3. King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia;1. Université Paris-Est, Lab’Urba (EA 3482), UPEC, UPEMLV, EIVP, F-7720 Champs-sur-Marne, France;2. Department of Science, Technology, Engineering and Public Policy, University College London, 36-38 Fitzroy Square, London W1T 6EY, United Kingdom;1. Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), P.O. Box 24218, SE-104 51 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Sustainable Development, Environmental Science and Engineering, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:Global challenges have exacerbated a search for solutions to poverty and environmental degradation. Integration it was argued would help address the twin challenge. Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) was supposed to be that magic bullet and was embraced by scientists because of the clinical efficiency with which it argued for integrated analysis of sectors and resources and of systems and scale conditions. This paper argues that effective implementation of the Water-Energy-Food (WEF) Nexus can be supported by robust science. The corollary that robust science automatically leads to effective implementation is not always known to be true. The nexus approach sheds light on the challenges of implementation by introducing concepts of trade-offs and thresholds and consequently emphasizes the importance of transdisciplinary approaches to sustainable development. This paper reviews the results of recent research to offer tentative answers to the following questions: (a) Why is the governance dimension important to undertake an integrated analysis of water-energy-food challenges? (b) What does the nexus approach connote in normative and institutional terms? (c) What does implementation mean in nexus terms? (d) How can we establish if the nexus approach is an improvement over business as usual? and (e) What tools are available that would enable translation of results of scientific research to create an evidence base that would enable decision makers to act in support of sustainable development?
Keywords:Trade-offs  Thresholds  Water-energy-food nexus  Critical mass  Nexus nodes  Transdisciplinarity  Wastewater reuse effectiveness index
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