TY - JOUR
T1 - Coupling coordination analysis of the water-food-energy‑carbon nexus for crop production in Central Asia
AU - Hu, Yanan
AU - Duan, Weili
AU - Zou, Shan
AU - Chen, Yaning
AU - De Maeyer, Philippe
AU - Van de Voorde, Tim
AU - Takara, Kaoru
AU - Kayumba, Patient Mindje
AU - Kurban, Alishir
AU - Goethals, Peter L.M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study is sponsored by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 42122004), the Chinese Academy of Sciences President's International Fellowship Initiative (Grant No. 2017VCA0002) and Yanan Hu was supported by a grant from the program of China Scholarship Council (ICPIT\u2013International Cooperative Program for Innovative Talents, Grant No. 202310630004) during her stay in Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Funding Information:
This study is sponsored by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 42122004 and No. 41971149 ), the Chinese Academy of Sciences President's International Fellowship Initiative (Grant No. 2017VCA0002 ) and Yanan Hu was supported by a grant from the program of China Scholarship Council (ICPIT\u2013International Cooperative Program for Innovative Talents, Grant No. 202310630004 ) during her stay in Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2024/6/7
Y1 - 2024/6/7
N2 - The growing resource constraints around land, water, and energy while tackling climate change in Central Asia threaten the agricultural sustainability that underpins food security and people livelihoods. However, there is a lack of comprehensive long-term evaluations of the intricate water-food-energy‑carbon nexus on a wider scale, hindering sustainable agriculture across this region. This study developed an integrated top-down and bottom-up approach to quantify the water consumption, energy use, and carbon emissions from crop production in Central Asia and established the coupling coordination model to evaluate the nexus (1995–2020). The results show that the total water consumption in Central Asia increased from 161.55 × 109 to 170.93 × 109 m3 at a rate of 1.39 × 109 m3/a in which blue water accounted for 59%. However, the energy use and carbon emissions decreased at a rate of − 1.57 PJ/a and − 0.06 MtCO2eq/a, respectively, in which the indirect energy and indirect carbon emissions varied greatly. Furthermore, the coupling coordination level of water-food-energy‑carbon nexus oscillated between uncoordinated and transitional development stages before 2000 and then entered coordinated development in 2003 after a short transitional development. The findings revealed that this oscillation may have been abnormal owing to issues such as yield loss and soil degradation. These results highlight the complex interplay between water, food, energy, and carbon of crop production across Central Asia and emphasise the need for a more integrated policymaking with increased regional cooperation, improvement in resource utilization efficiency, agricultural structure optimization, and protection of farmers rights towards agricultural sustainability.
AB - The growing resource constraints around land, water, and energy while tackling climate change in Central Asia threaten the agricultural sustainability that underpins food security and people livelihoods. However, there is a lack of comprehensive long-term evaluations of the intricate water-food-energy‑carbon nexus on a wider scale, hindering sustainable agriculture across this region. This study developed an integrated top-down and bottom-up approach to quantify the water consumption, energy use, and carbon emissions from crop production in Central Asia and established the coupling coordination model to evaluate the nexus (1995–2020). The results show that the total water consumption in Central Asia increased from 161.55 × 109 to 170.93 × 109 m3 at a rate of 1.39 × 109 m3/a in which blue water accounted for 59%. However, the energy use and carbon emissions decreased at a rate of − 1.57 PJ/a and − 0.06 MtCO2eq/a, respectively, in which the indirect energy and indirect carbon emissions varied greatly. Furthermore, the coupling coordination level of water-food-energy‑carbon nexus oscillated between uncoordinated and transitional development stages before 2000 and then entered coordinated development in 2003 after a short transitional development. The findings revealed that this oscillation may have been abnormal owing to issues such as yield loss and soil degradation. These results highlight the complex interplay between water, food, energy, and carbon of crop production across Central Asia and emphasise the need for a more integrated policymaking with increased regional cooperation, improvement in resource utilization efficiency, agricultural structure optimization, and protection of farmers rights towards agricultural sustainability.
KW - Central Asia
KW - Crop production
KW - Post soviet era
KW - Water-food-energy‑carbon nexus
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195169667&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.123584
DO - 10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.123584
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85195169667
SN - 0306-2619
VL - 369
JO - Applied Energy
JF - Applied Energy
M1 - 123584
ER -