Open Access
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volume 39 issue 15

The planetary water drama: Dual task of feeding humanity and curbing climate change

Johan Rockström 1
M. Falkenmark 2, 3
M. Lannerstad 4
Louise Karlberg 5, 6, 7, 8
2
 
Stockholm International Water Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
4
 
Stockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
5
 
Stockholm Environment Institute
6
 
Stockholm Sweden
7
 
Stockholm Resilience Centre
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2012-06-19
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR1.802
CiteScore8.4
Impact factor4.6
ISSN00948276, 19448007
Geophysics
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Abstract
[1] This paper analyses the potential conflict between resilience of the Earth system and global freshwater requirements for the dual task of carbon sequestration to reduce CO2in the atmosphere, and food production to feed humanity by 2050. It makes an attempt to assess the order of magnitude of the increased consumptive water use involved and analyses the implications as seen from two parallel perspectives; the global perspective of human development within a “safe operating space” with regard to the definition of the Planetary Boundary for freshwater; and the social-ecological implications at the regional river basin scale in terms of sharpening water shortages and threats to aquatic ecosystems. The paper shows that the consumptive water use involved in the dual task would both transgress the proposed planetary boundary range for global consumptive freshwater use and would further exacerbate already severe river depletion, causing societal problems related to water shortage and water allocation. Thus, strategies to rely on sequestration of CO2 as a mitigation strategy must recognize the high freshwater costs involved, implying that the key climate mitigation strategy must be to reduce emissions. The paper finally highlights the need to analyze both water and carbon tradeoffs from anticipated large scale biofuel production climate change mitigation strategy, to reveal gains and impact of this in contrast to carbon sequestration strategies.
Found 
Found 

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GOST Copy
Rockström J. et al. The planetary water drama: Dual task of feeding humanity and curbing climate change // Geophysical Research Letters. 2012. Vol. 39. No. 15.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Rockström J., Falkenmark M., Lannerstad M., Karlberg L. The planetary water drama: Dual task of feeding humanity and curbing climate change // Geophysical Research Letters. 2012. Vol. 39. No. 15.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1029/2012gl051688
UR - https://doi.org/10.1029/2012gl051688
TI - The planetary water drama: Dual task of feeding humanity and curbing climate change
T2 - Geophysical Research Letters
AU - Rockström, Johan
AU - Falkenmark, M.
AU - Lannerstad, M.
AU - Karlberg, Louise
PY - 2012
DA - 2012/06/19
PB - Wiley
IS - 15
VL - 39
SN - 0094-8276
SN - 1944-8007
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2012_Rockström,
author = {Johan Rockström and M. Falkenmark and M. Lannerstad and Louise Karlberg},
title = {The planetary water drama: Dual task of feeding humanity and curbing climate change},
journal = {Geophysical Research Letters},
year = {2012},
volume = {39},
publisher = {Wiley},
month = {jun},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1029/2012gl051688},
number = {15},
doi = {10.1029/2012gl051688}
}