4.8 Article

An expanded framing of ecosystem services is needed for a sustainable urban future

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 162, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2022.112418

Keywords

Urban ecosystem services; Urban metabolism; Life cycle thinking; Land cover change; System dynamics modelling; Urban land teleconnections

Funding

  1. National Research Fund (FNR) of Luxembourg [C16/SR/11311935]
  2. European Commission [730468]
  3. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia [CEECIND/04469/2017]

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Urban activities play a significant role in the decline of ecosystem services, and sustainable urbanization requires the anticipation and mitigation of these impacts. However, there is a lack of scalable and dynamic models to predict the changes caused by urban processes. This study developed a system dynamics model to predict the locations, types, and magnitude of changes in ecosystem services. The results showed that urban sustainability policies focused solely on reducing impacts within the city may be undermined by increased impacts in the regions that supply resources to the city. It was also found that policies targeting these extended environmental impacts could be more effective than those focusing solely on urban form.
Urban activities are an important driver of ecosystem services decline. Sustainable urbanisation necessitates anticipating and mitigating these negative socio-ecological impacts, both within and beyond city boundaries. There is a lack of scalable, dynamic models of changes to ecosystems wrought by urban processes. We developed a system dynamics model, ESTIMUM, to predict locations, types, and magnitude of changes in ecosystem services. We tested the model in Lisbon (Portugal) under four specific urban development scenarios - a base case scenario and three local sustainability-driven scenarios - to the year 2050. Our results show that urban sustainability policies focused on reducing impacts within Lisbon can be undermined by increased impacts in the extended regions that supply resources to the city. In particular, carbon sequestration from urban greening pales in comparison to growing greenhouse gases from the consumption of food, energy and construction materials. We also find that policies targeted at these extended environmental impacts can be much more effective than those with a limited focus on the urban form. For example, dietary shifts could support positive changes outside that city to increase global climate regulation by 54% compared to a mere 1% increase through intensive urban greening. This highlights the urgent need for a reframing of urban sustainability in policy and scholarly circles from city-centric focus towards an expanded multi-scalar conceptualisation of urban sustainability that accounts for urban impacts beyond the city boundaries.

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