GET THE APP

The Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Services Nexus
..

Journal of Global Economics

ISSN: 2375-4389

Open Access

Commentary - (2022) Volume 10, Issue 6

The Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Services Nexus

Jihen Hamdani*
*Correspondence: Jihen Hamdani, Department of Economics, Business Administration and Law, Sfax Universty, Berlin, Germany, Email:
Department of Economics, Business Administration and Law, Sfax Universty, Berlin, Germany

Received: 09-Jun-2022, Manuscript No. Economics-22-77390; Editor assigned: 10-Jun-2022, Pre QC No. P-77390; Reviewed: 13-Jun-2022, QC No. Q-77390; Revised: 20-Jun-2022, Manuscript No. R-77390; Published: 24-Jun-2022 , DOI: 10.37421/2375-4389.2022.10.359
Citation: Hamdani, Jihen. “The Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Service Nexus.” J Glob Eco 10 (2022): 359
Copyright: © 2022 Hamdani J. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Description

The In the scientific literature, the term "Nexus" refers to links and relationships. This is hardly a novel idea in science, where the integration of fields has been pushed with mixed results for decades. The word Nexus is now frequently used to describe connections between water, agriculture and energy Water scarcity or surplus may jeopardise the functioning of the food and energy production sectors, with societal and economic consequences. Sectoral stakeholders that have created techniques to managing water allocation are fully aware. However, governance approaches are frequently influenced by sectoral interests. The Water-Food-Energy Nexus can be shown as a means of overcoming stakeholders' perceptions of resources as independent entities. assets by gaining an awareness of the larger system it is the realisation that acting from an individual's point of view Sectors cannot contribute to addressing challenges confronting our water futures.Water allocation across water-using economic sectors must ensure that all water consumers receive what they require while also considering the needs of others it is the recognition of a type of social justice in which the involvement of a whole group is recognised. The community is critical for identifying development opportunities Targets. Addressing the Water Nexus, on the other hand, is still influenced. By a business strategy that attempts to set efficiency targets for the various industries.

The goal of the journal's special section on "Enabling Management of the Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Services" The goal of "Nexus" is to collect scientific contributions that address real-world issues. Ecosystem services must be considered in the management of the Water Food-Energy Nexus at the local, river basin and regional levels. The results of the call for papers revealed a scarcity of examples. Nexus applications based on the four pillars despite its high quality and Several of the manuscripts submitted were not publishable. The entire Nexus perspective, with ecosystem services receiving the least attention in the trade-off between conflicting uses the special area has a diversified assortment of papers covering a wide range of topics A survey of watershed investments in natural infrastructure solutions, as well as an examination of payment institutional arrangements Methodological approaches for watershed service systems. The Nexus is an idea, but it will remain so until we find a method to make it operational. Only expert communicators of sustainability can discuss this issue. River basin management has become more integrated. The Nexus' purposes are strikingly similar. However, it requires a robust institutional foundation, which can be found in but may be challenging to implement in less organised country associates. The Water Framework Directive provides the institutional framework for executing the Water Framework Directive Nexus. The promotes agricultural, energy and environmental integration. and environmental policies in a watershed as a requirement for developing options for sustainable water futures When creating such comprehensive policies It is critical to recognise that numerous Water Nexus-related activities [1-3].

Use a rigorous technique to modelling and charting water flow and availability in the Danube riverbasin utilising regular rainfall-groundwater replenishment from runoff models, as well as a plethora of spatially detailed data They also investigate the cost of water providing services based on market prices provided water per country Regardless, this valuation methodology Regarding the advantage of supplying water to end customers, the mapping of both Water's biophysical capacity and economic value can aid in design implementing water efficiency policies by weighing the advantages of an improved water resource allocation across the whole Water Nexus estimate the economic worth of alternate water applications using the residual method.

The importance of mapping ecosystem services in a recent study of best practises in mapping ecosystem services. mapping and modelling for empowerment and awareness consequences and concluded that a variety of approaches are required to address various user requirements The methods available for analysing the Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Services Nexus encompasses a wide range of applications, including the use of indicators and biophysical modelling as well as economic valuation Using any of these ways in conjunction with The use of mapping methods permits the intrinsically spatial nature. Nexus will be apprehended. The system in question, the decision context and the decision criteria all influence the selection of relevant tools Data and model availability This necessitates the usage of integrated Approaches to assessment that go beyond sectoral applicability The Water Nexus must also be operationalized, which necessitates the establishment or refining of policy tools for managing interactions between water, food, energy and ecosystem services The document instruments, as well as the institutional arrangements supporting the procedures under consideration. Conduct an institutional examination of Watershed service payments in the Western United States Payments for watershed services and, more broadly, payments for ecosystem services are a relatively new policy tool in resource conservation that offers a framework for resource protection. Which ecological service recipients can be compensated providers of services? [4-6]

Acknowledgement

None.

Conflict of Interest

None.

References

  1. Carpenter, Stephen R., Ruth DeFries and et al. "Millennium ecosystem assessment: research needs." Sci 314 (2006): 257-258.
  2. Google Scholar, Crossref, Indexed at

  3. Vallecillo, Sara, Alessandra La Notte, Silvia Ferrini, and Joachim Maes. "How ecosystem services are changing: an accounting application at the EU level."Ecosyst Serv 40 (2019): 101044.
  4. Google Scholar, Crossref, Indexed at

  5. Hugé, Jean, Anne-Julie Rochette and Stef de Béthune et al. "Ecosystem services assessment tools for African Biosphere Reserves.Ecosyst Serv 42 (2020): 101079.
  6. Google Scholar, Crossref

  7. Lourdes, Karen T. Chris N. Gibbins, Perrine Hamel and   Ruzana Sanusi et al  .  "A review of urban ecosystem services research in Southeast Asia."Land10 (2021): 40.
  8. Google Scholar, Crossref

  9. Castro‐Díez, Pilar, Ana Sofia Vaz, and Joaquim S. Silva et al. "Global effects of non‐native tree species on multiple ecosystem services." Biol Rev 94 (2019): 1477-1501.
  10. Google Scholar, Crossref, Indexed at

  11. Chen, Zhe, Apurbo Sarkar and Ahmed Khairul Hasan et al. "Evaluation of farmers’ ecological cognition in responses to specialty orchard fruit planting behavior: Shaanxi and Ningxia, China."Agriculture11   (2021): 1056.
  12. Google Scholar, Crossref

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1931

Journal of Global Economics received 1931 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Global Economics peer review process verified at publons

Indexed In

 
arrow_upward arrow_upward