期刊
WATER
卷 13, 期 4, 页码 -出版社
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13040528
关键词
delta; sustainable development; SDG; integrated assessment; India; mangrove; socio-ecological systems; integrated assessment modeling; climate change
资金
- NERC [NE/S012478/1]
- Formas Grant [2019-00045]
- UKIERI-DBT under UK-India Education Research Initiative [BT/IN/TaSE/70/SH/2018-19]
- NERC [NE/S012478/1] Funding Source: UKRI
- Formas [2019-00045] Funding Source: Formas
The study proposes an Integrated Assessment Modelling (IAM) framework to analyze the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) interactions within the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve in India. The densely populated area is affected by multiple drivers of environmental change, with considerations for agriculture, aquaculture, mangroves, fisheries, and multidimensional poverty among other factors. Key questions are explored under various scenarios, providing stakeholders and policy makers with valuable insights for prioritizing and exploring relevant SDG targets.
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and their corresponding targets are significantly interconnected, with many interactions, synergies, and trade-offs between individual goals across multiple temporal and spatial scales. This paper proposes a framework for the Integrated Assessment Modelling (IAM) of a complex deltaic socio-ecological system in order to analyze such SDG interactions. We focused on the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve (SBR), India, within the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Delta. It is densely populated with 4.4 million people (2011), high levels of poverty, and a strong dependence on rural livelihoods. It is adjacent to the growing megacity of Kolkata. The area also includes the Indian portion of the world's largest mangrove forest--the Sundarbans--hosting the iconic Bengal Tiger. Like all deltaic systems, this area is subject to multiple drivers of environmental change operating across scales. The IAM framework is designed to investigate socio-environmental change under a range of explorative and/or normative scenarios and explore associated policy impacts, considering a broad range of subthematic SDG indicators. The following elements were explicitly considered: (1) agriculture; (2) aquaculture; (3) mangroves; (4) fisheries; and (5) multidimensional poverty. Key questions that can be addressed include the implications of changing monsoon patterns, trade-offs between agriculture and aquaculture, or the future of the Sundarbans' mangroves under sea-level rise and different management strategies. The novel, high-resolution analysis of SDG interactions allowed by the IAM will provide stakeholders and policy makers the opportunity to prioritize and explore the SDG targets that are most relevant to the SBR and provide a foundation for further integrated analysis.
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