Social-economic-environmental trade-offs in managing the Land-River-Interface
Lead Research Organisation:
CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY
Department Name: School of Water, Energy and Environment
Abstract
Rivers and the land that surrounds them are focal points of economic activity and development in most countries. They are essential to humans for water supply, agriculture, transport and energy; hold significant importance socially and culturally; and have critically important ecological habitats that sustain high biodiversity. However, they are rarely managed in a holistic manner. Institutional boundaries, socio-economic drivers and barriers, and complex interactions in environmental processes limit severely our ability to integrate policies across the Land-River-Interface (LRI). As a result, management decisions often have unintended social, economic, cultural and environmental consequences locally and further upstream/downstream in the catchment.
The ecosystem services delivered by a holistically-managed LRI would support the attainment of multiple, interdependent Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): 1) No poverty - supporting rural livelihoods by mitigating soil erosion and flooding; 2) Zero hunger - sustainable food production, agroforestry, soil erosion; 6) Clean water and sanitation - pollutant trapping and bioremediation; 7) Affordable and clean energy - modern biomass and hydropower energy generation; 11) Sustainable cities and communities -risk reduction; safeguarding cultural heritage; 13) Climate Action - land-based climate mitigation, afforestation; 15) Life on Land - maintaining habitats and biodiversity.
The aim of the proposed project is to support the design of integrated and sustainable policy and practice solutions for the LRI that enhance multiple SDGs through investigation and modelling of the spatially-explicit social, economic and environmental trade-offs to LRI management under different socio-economic pathways and climate scenarios. The research is co-designed with the full range of key stakeholders (local farmers, water management boards, regional and national government) within the case study catchment, the Beas-Sutlej, a transnational river in the Himalayan region whose land, river and water drive the economy of the region (hydropower, irrigated agriculture). First, a set of research activities will be undertaken to characterise the social, economic, and environmental interactions operating in the LRI of the case study catchment. An institutional analysis will investigate the top-down barriers and enablers on integrated LRI management (Azhoni & Peng), and social research (interviews and surveys) will explore the bottom-up controls (Bala & Shankar). Then, this improved understanding will be employed to develop a whole systems representation of the LRI by merging terrestrial ecosystem service (Peng & Meersmans), catchment hydrological and water resource modelling (Holman & Shankar). The modelling will provide improved, spatially-explicit estimates of the land- and river-based ecosystem services that support attainment of the target SDGs, which will be used in the final set of activities to test policy and practice solutions (Grabowski, Bala, & Azhoni) under different future socio-economic and climate scenarios (Holman, Peng & Grabowski).
The LRI will continue to be a key area for economic development and intensification in the future. By understanding and predicting the nature and location of social-economic-environmental trade-offs to management, integrated solutions can be co-designed with stakeholders for its land, water and river resources to ensure future resilience and minimise unintended consequences in the human-environment system.
The ecosystem services delivered by a holistically-managed LRI would support the attainment of multiple, interdependent Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): 1) No poverty - supporting rural livelihoods by mitigating soil erosion and flooding; 2) Zero hunger - sustainable food production, agroforestry, soil erosion; 6) Clean water and sanitation - pollutant trapping and bioremediation; 7) Affordable and clean energy - modern biomass and hydropower energy generation; 11) Sustainable cities and communities -risk reduction; safeguarding cultural heritage; 13) Climate Action - land-based climate mitigation, afforestation; 15) Life on Land - maintaining habitats and biodiversity.
The aim of the proposed project is to support the design of integrated and sustainable policy and practice solutions for the LRI that enhance multiple SDGs through investigation and modelling of the spatially-explicit social, economic and environmental trade-offs to LRI management under different socio-economic pathways and climate scenarios. The research is co-designed with the full range of key stakeholders (local farmers, water management boards, regional and national government) within the case study catchment, the Beas-Sutlej, a transnational river in the Himalayan region whose land, river and water drive the economy of the region (hydropower, irrigated agriculture). First, a set of research activities will be undertaken to characterise the social, economic, and environmental interactions operating in the LRI of the case study catchment. An institutional analysis will investigate the top-down barriers and enablers on integrated LRI management (Azhoni & Peng), and social research (interviews and surveys) will explore the bottom-up controls (Bala & Shankar). Then, this improved understanding will be employed to develop a whole systems representation of the LRI by merging terrestrial ecosystem service (Peng & Meersmans), catchment hydrological and water resource modelling (Holman & Shankar). The modelling will provide improved, spatially-explicit estimates of the land- and river-based ecosystem services that support attainment of the target SDGs, which will be used in the final set of activities to test policy and practice solutions (Grabowski, Bala, & Azhoni) under different future socio-economic and climate scenarios (Holman, Peng & Grabowski).
The LRI will continue to be a key area for economic development and intensification in the future. By understanding and predicting the nature and location of social-economic-environmental trade-offs to management, integrated solutions can be co-designed with stakeholders for its land, water and river resources to ensure future resilience and minimise unintended consequences in the human-environment system.
Planned Impact
Understanding the social, economic and environmental trade-offs in the management of the land that adjoins the river (i.e. riparian zone) and the river itself (i.e. Land-River-Interface, LRI) is essential for attaining elements of multiple, interdependent Sustainable Development Goals: 1) No poverty - supporting rural livelihoods by mitigating soil erosion and flooding; 2) Zero hunger - sustainable food production, agroforestry, soil erosion; 6) Clean water and sanitation - pollutant trapping and bioremediation; 7) Affordable and clean energy - modern biomass and hydropower energy generation; 11) Sustainable cities and communities -risk reduction; safeguarding cultural heritage; 13) Climate Action - land-based climate mitigation, afforestation; 15) Life on Land - maintaining habitats and biodiversity.
The LRI project will use an improved understanding of the spatially-explicit trade-offs in LRI management strategies in a strategically-importance transboundary river basin to inform the design of integrated and sustainable solutions that enhance multiple SDGs. As such the research will resonate with a broad range of beneficiaries and will build upon, but not replicate, the research and successful engagement activities within the SusHi-Wat project (part of the UK-India 'Sustaining Water Resources' programme).
At the strategic level, national organisations in India and China responsible for policy formulation and practice in relation to land and water management, rural development and food security will benefit from improved understanding of how policy planning can reduce the trade-offs within ecosystem services and SDGs associated with LRI management. These include the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning, the Planning Commission (India), national and State Ministries of Agriculture, Rural Development, Environment and Forest, etc. At the State/Province level, the state Departments of Agriculture (provider of agricultural extension activities), Irrigation & Public Health and Urban Development will benefit from freely available tools for assessing social-economic-environmental trade-offs in LRI management, and fed into local planning in block development councils (Panchayat Samiti) via elected board members, which include parliamentary and state legislative assembly members (India). At the river-basin level, water and hydropower providers (SJVN, NHPN, Bkahra-Beas Management Board) will benefit from insights to support their environmental protection/ improvement and community service activities. Local rural farmers and landless workers will ultimately benefit through improved livelihoods resulting from increased availability of provisioning ecosystem services and improved welfare of women and families (Mahila Mandals).
A range of impact activities are scheduled, including:
(1) Stakeholder engagement through a project website and social media that will link the research team and key end users in India and China and act as a focal point for the outreach and networking activities. This will be supported through pre-existing relationships and those established through the WP1 engagement activities with national and state policymakers, agencies and farmers;
(2) Production of short non-technical summaries and policy briefs (in English, Hindi and Mandarin) will be disseminated to LRI-interviewees (from WP1); TASE programme participants and wider national/international initiatives/projects/commissions
(3) Workshops- we will carry out 3 workshops with farmer organizations, central and state government agencies and agricultural extension advisers at the start, mid-point and end of the project.
(4) Education and Extension Education - the research will feed into the taught undergraduate, postgraduate and CPD short courses, and extension education programmes.
Full details of activities provided in the pathways to impact
The LRI project will use an improved understanding of the spatially-explicit trade-offs in LRI management strategies in a strategically-importance transboundary river basin to inform the design of integrated and sustainable solutions that enhance multiple SDGs. As such the research will resonate with a broad range of beneficiaries and will build upon, but not replicate, the research and successful engagement activities within the SusHi-Wat project (part of the UK-India 'Sustaining Water Resources' programme).
At the strategic level, national organisations in India and China responsible for policy formulation and practice in relation to land and water management, rural development and food security will benefit from improved understanding of how policy planning can reduce the trade-offs within ecosystem services and SDGs associated with LRI management. These include the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning, the Planning Commission (India), national and State Ministries of Agriculture, Rural Development, Environment and Forest, etc. At the State/Province level, the state Departments of Agriculture (provider of agricultural extension activities), Irrigation & Public Health and Urban Development will benefit from freely available tools for assessing social-economic-environmental trade-offs in LRI management, and fed into local planning in block development councils (Panchayat Samiti) via elected board members, which include parliamentary and state legislative assembly members (India). At the river-basin level, water and hydropower providers (SJVN, NHPN, Bkahra-Beas Management Board) will benefit from insights to support their environmental protection/ improvement and community service activities. Local rural farmers and landless workers will ultimately benefit through improved livelihoods resulting from increased availability of provisioning ecosystem services and improved welfare of women and families (Mahila Mandals).
A range of impact activities are scheduled, including:
(1) Stakeholder engagement through a project website and social media that will link the research team and key end users in India and China and act as a focal point for the outreach and networking activities. This will be supported through pre-existing relationships and those established through the WP1 engagement activities with national and state policymakers, agencies and farmers;
(2) Production of short non-technical summaries and policy briefs (in English, Hindi and Mandarin) will be disseminated to LRI-interviewees (from WP1); TASE programme participants and wider national/international initiatives/projects/commissions
(3) Workshops- we will carry out 3 workshops with farmer organizations, central and state government agencies and agricultural extension advisers at the start, mid-point and end of the project.
(4) Education and Extension Education - the research will feed into the taught undergraduate, postgraduate and CPD short courses, and extension education programmes.
Full details of activities provided in the pathways to impact
Publications
Azhoni A
(2022)
Identifying evolving priorities in national river governance from Parliamentary Questions
in Water Policy
Beale J
(2022)
Vegetation cover dynamics along two Himalayan rivers: Drivers and implications of change.
in The Science of the total environment
Chazdon R
(2021)
The intervention continuum in restoration ecology: rethinking the active-passive dichotomy
in Restoration Ecology
Chen W
(2022)
Green Nourishment: An Innovative Nature-Based Solution for Coastal Erosion
in Frontiers in Marine Science
Grabowski R
(2022)
The land-river interface: a conceptual framework of environmental process interactions to support sustainable development
in Sustainability Science
Vercruysse K
(2021)
Human impact on river planform within the context of multi-timescale river channel dynamics in a Himalayan river system
in Geomorphology
Vercruysse K
(2022)
Place-based interpretation of the sustainable development goals for the land-river interface
in Sustainability Science
Wang X
(2022)
Exploring social-ecological impacts on trade-offs and synergies among ecosystem services
in Ecological Economics
Description | First, we developed a new framework, called the Land-River-Interface, to aid dialogue between different sectors and assist the identification of synergies and conflicts between management interventions to support the attainment of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Secondly, our investigation of the impacts of human activities on Himalayan river systems has shown that geomorphic alterations can extend for decades after dam construction and are influenced substantially by dam operations. Thirdly, we found that human-induced changes to river flow and sediment transport have created new opportunities for farming in the former channel bed but is exposing new risks to people and infrastructure from riverbank erosion and flooding. Fourthly, we proposed new conceptual and analytical approaches to quantify the impacts of land use and development activities on ecosystem services and the attainment of SDGs that take into consideration river processes. Finally, our social science research led to the identification of the changing priorities of policy-makers in India that is affecting the governance of river systems. |
Exploitation Route | Development activities are causing significant and often unintended consequences local and further afield through river processes. The conceptual framework and empirical evidence of these process interactions will help practitioners, environmental managers, and regulators to better assess and manage land and water resources in an integrated manner. |
Sectors | Agriculture Food and Drink Construction Environment |
Description | Case study for MSc teaching |
Geographic Reach | Multiple continents/international |
Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
Impact | The NERC project has been used as a case study for the MSc course in Advanced Water Management. It illustrates how a systems approach to land and water management and policy can help to maximize synergistic benefits, minimize unintentional impacts, and support the attainment of sustainable development goals. Through a series of interactive workshops, the students learned how to apply these principles to other catchments, including back in their home countries in Europe, Africa and Asia. |
Description | MSc thesis (Cranfield University): Mapping priority areas for SDG attainment in the Land-River Interface (case study: Sutlej-Beas catchment) |
Geographic Reach | National |
Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
Impact | The work supported training and educational developments for a postgraduate student (research skills, topic specific knowledge) |
Description | MSc thesis (Cranfield University): Vegetation dynamics along the Sutlej-Beas river system |
Geographic Reach | National |
Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
Impact | The work supported training and educational developments for a postgraduate student (research skills, topic specific knowledge) |
Description | The Connected Waters Leverhulme Doctoral Programme |
Amount | £2,215,370 (GBP) |
Organisation | The Leverhulme Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 09/2024 |
End | 09/2032 |
Description | The future of the Rights of Nature: an interdisciplinary scoping analysis |
Amount | £73,389 (GBP) |
Funding ID | AH/V00574X/1 |
Organisation | Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 12/2020 |
End | 09/2022 |
Title | Land-River Interface Management Semi-Structured Interview Data |
Description | About the data: The data contained in this archive are collected through semi-structured interviews from officials in key organizations involved in land-river interface management in India. The interviews were conducted through online video conferencing and recorded which were later transcribed verbatim for analyzing the key challenges of land-river interface management in India. The Garret ranking data was collected at the end of the interviews and marked in the form by the interviewer. The research was conducted as part of a collaborative NERC Towards a Sustainable Earth project (2019-2022), with direct funding from the Indian Department of Biotechnology. File names: Each interview transcript is in different files with the file name indicating the type organizations the interview respondents represent, viz; Academic Institutions (AI), Central Government Agencies (CGA), Central Government Ministries (CGI), Non-governmental organizations (NG), and State Government Departments (SG). This files are being archived for future reference and for providing transparency to the research data. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2022 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
URL | https://cord.cranfield.ac.uk/articles/dataset/Land-River_Interface_Management_Semi-Structured_Interv... |
Title | Riparian vegetation dynamics in the Beas and Sutlej catchments, India, 1989-2020 |
Description | The data comprises river section, zone and test site delineation, winter Season average NDVI by section and zone 1989-2020, land cover maps seasonally 1989-2020, and derived land cover fractions by section and zone 1989-2020. The data was produced as part of a study to determine how changes in geomorphic form and dynamics due to human alteration to river flows and riparian land management relate to changes in vegetation communities in the Sutlej and Beas Rivers, India. Vegetated and other land cover, including water area, were quantified by winter season NDVI trends (in the plains of Punjab) and seasonal supervised classification of Landsat data for over a 30-year period. The work was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (Grant NE/S01232X/1). |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2022 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | Impact yet to be determined. |
URL | https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/id/9a96e199-34d0-46f9-9a64-140d300a2531 |
Title | River planform dynamics in the Beas and Sutlej catchments, India, 1847 and 1989-2018 |
Description | The data was produced as part of a study to determine human impacts on river planform change within the context of short- and long-term river channel dynamics. To this end, the Himalayan Sutlej-Beas River system was used as a case study to (i) systematically assess changes in river planform characteristics over centennial, annual, seasonal, and episodic timescales; (ii) connect the observed patterns of planform change to human-environment drivers and interactions; and (iii) conceptualise these geomorphic changes in terms of timescale-dependant evolutionary trajectories. The dataset was derived from historic maps (1847-1850) and remote sensing data (Landsat over a 30-year period). It comprises post monsoon season wet river area annually 1989-2018, post monsoon season active gravel bars annually 1989-2018, active channel area (maximum extent between 1989-2018), active channel width annually 1989-2018, active channel width assessed from historic map (1847-1850), and the Anabranching index, annually 1989-2018. The work was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (Grant NE/S01232X/1). |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2022 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
URL | https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/id/f7aada06-7352-44c0-988e-2f4b31690189 |
Description | Collaboration with University of Liege (Belgium) on Land use change modelling |
Organisation | University of Liege |
Country | Belgium |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | We have collaborated with Prof. Jeroen Meersmans and his students at University of Liege (Belgium). Being expert in the research catchments and its dynamics, we have supported a group of students in their work and provided feedback. |
Collaborator Contribution | As part of a group project, the students have collected data on our study catchment and developed a model to estimate future land use changes in our study area. This was done under the guidance of Prof. Meersmans, who has expertise in this field of research. |
Impact | The outputs of the research will be directly integrated with other components of our research, leading to a joint publication. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | Annual Conference of the River Restoration Centre |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | A poster presentation was presented during the online annual conference of the River Restoration Center, which introduced part of our research. The poster contained our contact details so that delegates of the conference can contact us for more information on the project. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | Blog on Cranfield University site |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | As part of World River Day, the PDRA on the project, the PDRA wrote a blog about the international, collaborative research project and the kickoff meeting we held in Hamirpur, India in Sep 2019. She described the importance of the research to help better understand the interactions between environmental, social and economic processes operating in and around rivers and how they affect the ecosystem services. According to the blog site, 93 people have read the blog. Many of the people that read the blogs are prospective postgraduate students, a significant proportion of which (>50% in the Water programme) are international. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
URL | https://blogs.cranfield.ac.uk/environmental-technology/rivers-connecting-countries-and-people-in-ind... |
Description | Integrated land and water management workshop at the RRC Annual Network Conference |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | A 3.5 workshop was run on day 2 of the RRC annual confenrnece. The purpose of the workshop was to share knowledge to co-create an up-to-date summary of the policy, regulatory and scientific dimensions to integrated land-water management to support river restoration, based on the Land-River-Interface conceptual framework developed in the NERC project. The audience included ca. 120 professional practitioners and representatives from NGOs and government agencies. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://www.therrc.co.uk/sites/default/files/files/Conference/2022/handbook_2022_v3-comp.pdf |
Description | Invited seminar at Brighton University, School of Environment and Technology |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | Delivered a 45-min talk to postgraduate students and academics in the School of Environment and Technology, which led to conversations with an academic about aligning our work in natural flood risk research |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
Description | Invited seminar at Coventry University, Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | Delivered a 1 hr long talk on the project to current postgraduate students and academics in the Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience, which was externally advertised. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
URL | https://www.coventry.ac.uk/research/about-us/research-events/2020/human-environment-interactions-in-... |
Description | Invited seminar at Unviersity of Leeds, Department of Geography |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | Delivered a 45-minute presentation on the NERC project, focusing on human-geomorphology interactions in the case study river systems. The talk lead to a follow-up meeting with a postgraduate student about their Masters by Research project. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | Invited seminar speaker at King's College London, Department of Geography |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | The PI was invited to deliver a seminar to the Department of Geography, Kings College London on 13 November. He gave a 1 hr lecture on researching across physical and human geography topics, using the NERC project to illustrate. The audience was composed predominantly of research students in the department (PhD and MRes), and prompted a lively discussion afterwards about the challenges of interdisciplinary research and achieving impact from natural science research |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
Description | Poster at Waters without Borders event |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | The PDRA presented a poster entitled 'Mapping socio-economic-environmental interactions and trade-offs to sustainably manage the land-river interface: a fluvial geomorphologists' perspective' at the international event on 28 November in Brussels, Belgium. She spoke with numerous people about the project, most of whom were representing NGOs in the sector. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
URL | https://uclouvain.be/en/research/louvain4water/events/water-without-borders-linking-belgian-stakehol... |
Description | Press release at start of the projec |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
Results and Impact | The PI wrote a press release to help make the general public aware of the new project and its important potential impacts to the attainment of sustainable development goals, which the university issued on 27 Feb 2019. I am not aware of how many people have read the press release, but it has generated interest. Since the press release, the PI was contacted by two current international PhD students that would like to conduct related research at Cranfield. They stated that they learned of the project via search engines and the press release. Both students are seeking external funding to support research trips to Cranfield |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
URL | https://www.cranfield.ac.uk/press/news-2019/how-can-better-river-management-help-meet-sustainable-de... |
Description | River Restoration Centre Annual Network Conference |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | A talk was given on the Land-River-Interface concept developed in the NERC project, explaining how it is relevant to river restoration and ecosystem restoration. The audience was ca. 120 professional practitioners and represenatives from NGOs and government agencies. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://www.therrc.co.uk/previous-rrc-conferences |
Description | Talk to professional association (British Hydrological Society) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | The postdoc was invited to give a 30 min presentation about the project as part of a monthly seminar series run by the Southeast section of the British Hydrological Society. The talk was given at the Institute of Civil Engineers in Westminster on 20 September 2019. The audience was composed equally of people working in the water sector and postgraduate students from univeristies in London and the Southeast. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
Description | Workshops in Himachal Pradesh, India |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Project partners in India from CSKHPKV / HAREC Bajaura delivered advice and education workshops on horticulture, agriculture, and animal husbandry practices in eight villages in the upper Beas valley. The workshops occurred on the same day as interviews for the study but were opened up to a wide audience, allowing a larger number of villagers to attend. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020,2021 |