خيارات البحث
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The Water for Food Paradox النص الكامل
2013
Chartres, C. | Sood, A.
This paper considers whether there will be sufficient water available to grow enough food for a predicted global population of 9 billion in 2050, based on three population and GDP growth modelling scenarios. Under the a low population growth with high GDP growth scenario, global consumptive water demand is forecast to increase significantly to over 6,000 km3, which is approximately 3,000 km3 greater that consumptive use in the year 2000. Also of concern is that rising global temperatures are going to increase potential evaporation, and t us irrigation water demand, by up to 17%. Sustainable intensification of agriculture can provide solutions to this predicament. However, productivity growth i not fast enough and we face considerable risks in the next 20 to 30 years. Concerted action to combat food insecurity and water scarcity is required based on agricultural research and development, policy reform and greater water productivity, if the world is to feed its growing population.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]The Volta River Basin: water for food, economic growth and environment
2016
Williams, Timothy O. | Mul, Marloes L. | Biney, C.A. | Smakhtin, Vladimir U.
Impacts of food wastage on water resources and environment in China النص الكامل
2018
Sun, S.K. | Lu, Y.J. | Gao, H. | Jiang, T.T. | Du, X.Y. | Shen, T.X. | Wu, P.T. | Wang, Y.B.
Food production consumes a large amount of water consumption and generates huge amounts of greenhouse gas emissions. Quantitative study of impact food wastage imposing on water and greenhouse gas emissions contributes to public awareness that food wastage will further worsen the resource shortage and climate warming, reducing food wastage accordingly. This paper evaluates the impacts of food wastage in the consumption stage on water resources and the environment in China. The result indicates that in the year 2010, the wastage of major food in China was around 62818 M kg in the consumption link, accounting for 14.5% of the total food production, of which the plant food wastage takes up the majority. The loss of water resources (blue water plus green water) caused by food wastage is 60502 Mm³, more than 10% of the country's total water use. Food wastage has a serious impact on agricultural non-point source pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, resulting in a grey water footprint of 16292 Mm³ and 60.85 M ton of carbon emissions. Taking regional differences of food consumption into consideration, the proportion of water footprints and carbon emissions in the eastern and southern developed areas is relatively higher, while the plant food takes a relatively larger share in water footprints and carbon emissions in the western and central provinces. Reducing food waste is important to remove unnecessary burdens on the environment and natural resources. The optimization of resource utilization in the process of food production is conducive to effectively reduce water footprints and carbon emissions of food; healthy diets shall be popularized among citizens so that the animal food consumption which causes more water footprints and carbon emissions can be decreased, alleviating resource and environmental burdens through reduction of the wastage in food consumption.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]The Volta River Basin: water for food, economic growth and environment
2016
Williams, Timothy O. | Mul, Marloes L. | Biney, C. A. | Smakhtin, Vladimir
Climate change and temperature rise: Implications on food- and water-borne diseases النص الكامل
2012
El-Fadel, Mutasem | Ghanimeh, Sophia | Maroun, Rania | Alameddine, Ibrahim
This study attempts to quantify climate-induced increases in morbidity rates associated with food- and water-borne illnesses in the context of an urban coastal city, taking Beirut-Lebanon as a study area. A Poisson generalized linear model was developed to assess the impacts of temperature on the morbidity rate. The model was used with four climatic scenarios to simulate a broad spectrum of driving forces and potential social, economic and technologic evolutions. The correlation established in this study exhibits a decrease in the number of illnesses with increasing temperature until reaching a threshold of 19.2°C, beyond which the number of morbidity cases increases with temperature. By 2050, the results show a substantial increase in food- and water-borne related morbidity of 16 to 28% that can reach up to 42% by the end of the century under A1FI (fossil fuel intensive development) or can be reversed to ~0% under B1 (lowest emissions trajectory), highlighting the need for early mitigation and adaptation measures.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Environmental sustainability issues in the food–energy–water nexus: Breakfast cereals and snacks النص الكامل
2015
Jeswani, Harish Kumar | Burkinshaw, Richard | Azapagic, Adisa
Understanding environmental impacts of complete food supply chains is important for the food industry to help devise strategies for reducing the impacts of current and future products. Breakfast cereals are one of the most important foods consumed in many countries, but their environmental impacts are currently unknown. Therefore, this study explores the environmental sustainability issues in the food–energy–water nexus by considering breakfast cereals manufactured by one of the world’s largest producers, Kellogg Europe. A life cycle assessment has been carried out for these purposes with the aim of helping the Company to integrate environmental sustainability considerations into the design of their products and packaging. The results indicate that the average global warming potential (GWP) of Kellogg’s breakfast cereals is 2.64 kg CO2 eq. per kg of product. The main GWP hotspots are the ingredients (48%) and energy used in the manufacturing process (23%); packaging and transport contribute 15% each. Rice is the single largest contributor to the GWP of the ingredients (38%). The manufacturing stage is the main contributor of primary energy demand (34%), while the ingredients are responsible for more than 90% of the water footprint. The ingredients are also the main contributors to most other environmental impacts, including land use (97%), depletion of elements (61%), eutrophication (71%), human toxicity (54%) and photochemical smog (50%). The impacts from packaging are high for freshwater and marine toxicity. The contribution of transport is significant for depletion of elements and fossil resources (23%), acidification (32%), ozone depletion (28%) and photochemical smog (24%). Improvement opportunities explored in the paper include better agricultural practices, recipe modifications, improved energy efficiency of manufacturing processes and use of alternative packaging. Impacts from consumption are also discussed.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Development of a life cycle assessment tool for the assessment of food production systems within the energy, water and food nexus النص الكامل
2015
Al-Ansari, Tareq | Korre, Anna | Nie, Zhenggang | Shah, Nilay
As the demand for services and products continues to increase in light of rapid population growth, the question of energy, water and food (EWF) security is of increasing importance. The systems representing the three resources are intrinsically connected and, as such, there is a need to develop assessment tools that consider their interdependences. Specifically when evaluating the environmental performance of a food production system, it is necessary to understand its life cycle. The objective of this paper is to introduce an integrated energy, water and food life cycle assessment tool that integrates EWF resources in one robust model and at an appropriate resolution. The nexus modelling tool developed is capable of providing an environmental assessment for food production systems utilising a holistic systems approach as described by a series of subsystems that constitute each of the EWF resources. A case study set in Qatar and characterised by an agriculture sub-system, which includes the production and application of fertilisers and the raising of livestock, a water sub-system represented by mechanical and thermal desalination processes and an energy sub-system, which includes fossil fuel in the form of combined cycle natural gas based energy production and solar renewable energy is used to illustrate the model function. For the nexus system analysed it is demonstrated that the food system is the largest contributor to global warming. The GWP can be reduced by up to 30% through the utilisation of solar energy to substitute fossil fuels, which, however, comes with a significant requirement for land investment.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Physiological and biochemical responses of brackish-water clam Corbicula japonica under global-warming conditions: Water temperature, salinity, and food availability النص الكامل
2021
Pokhrel, Preeti | Suzuki, Jumpei | Akther, Shumona | Fujita, Masafumi
To investigate biomarkers representing the physiological and biochemical responses of the brackish-water clam Corbicula japonica, we conducted a full factorial-design experiment to test different water-temperature levels (20 °C and 25 °C), salinity levels (5 and 20 psu), and food-availability levels (0.5 and 2.0 mg suspended solids (SS)·ind⁻¹·d⁻¹). Increase in water temperature significantly decreased superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activities and oxyradical-absorbance capacity (ORAC), leading to lipid peroxidation (i.e., oxidative damage). Salinity activated or inhibited these biochemical markers. Food availability supported a detoxification mechanism against oxidative stress. Principal-components and cluster analyses revealed that a total of eight experimental conditions fell into three groups related to water temperature and/or salinity. The shift from Group I (20 °C water temperature) to Group II (25 °C water temperature and 5-psu salinity) demonstrated that the condition index, SOD, CAT, and ORAC had significantly decreased. With the further shift to Group III (25 °C water temperature and 20-psu salinity), we found a prominent increase in ORAC, which led to oxidative damage but no mortality. We conclude that future habitat changes driven by global warming should be closely watched, particularly given that local anthropogenic disturbances further add to natural ones.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Integration of greenhouse gas control technologies within the energy, water and food nexus to enhance the environmental performance of food production systems النص الكامل
2017
Al-Ansari, Tareq | Korre, Anna | Nie, Zhenggang | Shah, Nilay
The sustainability of food production systems is inherently linked with energy, water and food (EWF) resources directly and in-directly throughout their lifecycle. The understanding of the interdependencies between the three resource sectors in the context of food production can provide a measurable account for resource requirements, while meeting food security objectives. The energy, water and food Nexus tool developed by the authors has been designed to model the inter-dependency between energy, water and food resources, whilst conducting an environmental assessment of product systems. With emphasis on the inter-linkages between EWF resources, the tool quantifies material flows, natural resource and energy consumption at component unit process level. This work integrates greenhouse gas control and waste to power technologies within the energy, water and food Nexus tool and evaluates the environmental impact of a hypothetical food product system designed to deliver a perceived level of food self-sufficiency (40%) for the State of Qatar. Multiple system configurations, representative of different pathways for the delivery of consistent food products are evaluated, transforming a once linear product system into a circular design. The sub-systems added consist of a biomass integrated gasification combined cycle which recycles solid waste into useful forms of energy that can be re-used within the nexus. In addition, a carbon capture sub-system is integrated to capture and recycle CO2 from both the fossil fuel powered and the biomass integrated gasification combined cycle energy sub-systems. The integration of carbon capture with the biomass integrated gasification combined cycle transforms the carbon neutral biomass integrated gasification combined cycle process to a negative greenhouse gas emission technology known as bio-energy with carbon capture and storage. For the different scenarios and sub-system configurations considered, the global warming potential can be theoretically balanced (reduced by ∼98%) through the integration of photovoltaics, biomass integrated gasification combined cycle and carbon capture technologies. The peak global warming potential, i.e. a fully fossil fuel dependent system, is recorded at 1.73 × 10⁹ kg CO2 eq./year whilst the lowest achievable global warming potential is 2.18 × 10⁷ kg CO2 eq./year when utilising a combination of photovoltaics, carbon capture integrated with combined cycle gas turbine in addition to the integrated negative emission achieving system. The natural gas consumption is reduced by 7.8 × 10⁷ kg/year in the best case configuration, achieving a credit. In the same scenario, the photovoltaics land footprint required is calculated to a maximum of 660 ha. The maximum theoretically achievable negative emission is 1.09 × 10⁹ kg CO2/year.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Optimal rice-crab co-culture system as a new paradigm to air-water-food nexus sustainability النص الكامل
2021
Khoshnevisan, Benyamin | Bashir, Muhammad Amjad | Sun, Qiaoyu | Pan, Junting | Wang, Hongyuan | Xu, Yang | Duan, Na | Liu, Hongbin
Rice production, despite its important role in food security, could bring about environmental problems such as methane emissions and polluting water resources. To decrease such negative environmental impacts, the co-culture of rice with ecologically friendly aquatic animals such as crabs has shown promising results. However, there are still serious concerns about the proper implementation of rice co-culture systems. Having considered rice-crab systems, crab stock density and the amount of crab feed, among others, are two important factors which regulate the performance of the system and the associated environmental pollution. However, their optimal values and their underlying relationship with enviro-economic parameters (e.g. methane emissions, nitrous oxide emissions, ammonia volatilization, yield, N uptake, nitrate in drainage water, and profit) have not been scrutinized yet. Accordingly, a set of farm experiments has been performed to measure enviro-economic parameters under mono- and co-cultivation of rice. Moreover, the attempts were made to explore the underlying correlations between crab stock density and the amount of crab feed as two independent variables and measured parameters such as yield and greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, an appropriate optimization model was developed to find the optimal crab density and crab feed in order to minimize the environmental pollution and maximize crab and rice yield as well as net profit. At the end, a farm survey was also conducted to evaluate the shortages in co-culture systems. The results showed that, under optimal rice-crab co-culture system, the improvements in nutrient uptakes ranged from 5.2% to 23.3%, with the lowest for Zn uptake and the highest for N uptake. Under such circumstances, 355% lower global warming impact would be attained compared to rice mono-culture showing a significant contribution to greenhouse gas mitigation. Furthermore, farmers would benefit from 122% higher profit under co-culture systems. The results achieved herein also have policy implications because it would help to decrease national greenhouse gas emissions and avoid deterioration of water resources while help farmers to ensure earning a high profit.
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