4.0 Article

Towards fossil free cities - Emission assessment of food and resources consumption with the FEWprint carbon accounting platform

期刊

CLEANER ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS
卷 4, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cesys.2022.100074

关键词

Nexus; Carbon accounting; Sustainable cities; Urban food production; Assessment model; Carbon emissions

资金

  1. Sustainable Urbanisation Global Initiative (SUGI) programme
  2. Belmont Forum
  3. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [438-17-404]
  4. ESRC/AHRC [ES/S002197/1]
  5. Innovate UK [620144]
  6. Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) [BFSUGI01-1120-170005]
  7. U.S. NSF [1832214]
  8. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) [JPMJBF1702]
  9. Joint Programming Initiative (JPI) Urban Europe [11314551]
  10. Directorate For Geosciences
  11. ICER [1832214] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Urbanization leads to concentrated demand for food, energy and water resources, resulting in increased greenhouse gas emissions. The FEW nexus integrative approach offers a potential framework for sustainable resource management in cities, but existing evaluation tools have limitations. This paper introduces FEWprint, an integrated carbon accounting platform that allows for evaluations of urban areas. The platform calculates a consumption-based footprint derived from various resource sectors and can be used to compare emissions between communities.
Current urbanization rates concentrate the ever growing demand for food, energy and water (FEW) resources particularly in cities, making them one of the main drivers of greenhouse gas emissions. The FEW nexus integrative approach offers a potential framework for sustainable resource management in cities. However, existing nexus evaluation tools are limited in application and often inadequate. This is primarily due to the FEW nexus intricacy, the tools' operational complexity and/or the need to input comprehensive data that is often unavailable to users. Having outlined these current gaps, this paper introduces the FEWprint, an integrated carbon accounting platform that provides an accessible process for FEW nexus-based evaluations of urban areas. This spreadsheet-based framework is employed to calculate a consumption-based footprint derived from food consumption, thermal/electrical energy use, car fuel demand, water management, and domestic waste processing. A comparative assessment between six different communities reveals significant differences in total annual emissions. The food sector impact shows emissions ranging between 993Kg/cap*yr and 1366Kg/cap*yr in Amsterdam and Tokyo respectively, but is also the least deviating from all considered resource sectors. This holistic carbon footprint and considered food inventory will serve as a baseline for future integrated urban farming strategies and urban design proposals to be tested.

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