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Biowater’s second special issue is out

BIOWATER has finalised its second special issue in the journal CATENA. Follow this link to find all papers: “Assessing the potential for adverse environmental side-effects of a developing bio-economy in Nordic river basins”.

The special issue was edited by Jan Vermaat, Philip Jordan, Per-Erik Mellander and Marc Stutter. It comprises 10 papers that combine empirical findings with modelled scenario outcomes until 2050. The issue is a continuation of our AMBIO special issue from 2020. A preface of the special issue summarises the main findings. The 10 papers in CATENA have been divided into the following topics:

BIOWATER’s latest research results in a nutshell

Jan Vermaat headed the work on summarising BIOWATER’s results since the last summary in 2020 (Skarbøvik et al. 2020), concluding, amongst others, that a sustainable pathway will optimise both water quality and biodiversity without welfare loss:

Scenarios for a Nordic bioeconomy

The Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (O’Neill et al. 2017) were translated to Nordic Bioeconomy Pathways by Rakovic et al. (2020), and were then further articulated through stakeholder consultations and expert opinions, as described in this paper:

Modelling the scenarios

The Nordic Bioeconomy Pathways were modelled in all four countries. As noted in the preface, the greenest scenario (Sustainability first) was in general the best for the water environment, whereas intensification of land use (both within forestry and agriculture) will likely be most pronounced in a business-as-usual, growth-orientated, or food security scenario. In these scenarios it will likely be difficult to reach the water quality targets set under the European Water Framework Directive.

Ecosystem services

Ecosystems provide us with a variety of services, and by comparing these under the five Nordic Bioeconomy Pathways, BIOWATER researchers found that the summed value of all services were highest under the Sustainability first’ and ‘Growth first’ scenarios. Moreover, the value of outdoor recreation may not be sufficiently considered as compared to other ecosystem services in current decision making.

Mitigation measures

In order to reduce impacts of a growing bioeconomy with increased biomass exploitation, mitigation measures will become increasingly important. Hence, knowledge on the effectiveness of such mitigation is necessary:

Novel monitoring methods

When the land use change, so will the water quantity and quality: Monitoring such effects is important, and the use of novel monitoring methods needs to be further explored to ensure that they are harmonised and thereby comparable:  

All these papers can be found in the CATENA Special Issue.

Feature photo: Eva Skarbøvik.

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