EnergyScapes and Ecosystem Services

Lead Research Organisation: CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY
Department Name: Sch of Applied Sciences

Abstract

Renewable energy has recently received considerable media and public attention because of perceived benefits to the environment, including climate change, the potential to replace imported sources of energy, the possible impact on food production, and aesthetic issues related to the location of wind turbines. Potential sources of land-based renewable energy include bioenergy from forests, arable crops, energy crops and waste, solar heating and electricity, hydroelectricity, ground-source heat, and wind-energy. The spatial organisation of such energy sources, together with energy demand, energy infrastructure and other energy-sources within a particular landscape can be termed the 'EnergyScape'. 'Ecosystem Services' is a collective term to describe the various services we obtain from land and its associated ecosystems. They include the provision of food, fibre and fuel, the regulation of nutrients, water supply and water quality, the creation of opportunities for recreation and education, the maintenance of biodiversity, and the space to build and maintain our supporting infrastructure. The development and use of land-based renewable energy resources will have both negative and positive impacts on these services. Positive aspects may include increased biodiversity from biomass crops; negative aspects may include reduced river flows and increased road transport of biomass. This one-year research project aims to determine, through a pilot study, how a systematic understanding of the 'EnergyScape' and 'Ecosystem Services' could help guide the deployment of land-based renewables. For the pilot study we have selected Marston Vale in Bedfordshire which is a sub-catchment of the Great Ouse river, and contains a mix of agricultural, forestry and urban land. It is the site of a community forest and there is local interest in renewable energy. Working with national and local stakeholder groups, the project will identify the key sources of renewable energy within the study area and the key ecosystem services likely to be affected by the development of land-based renewables. Using spatial data, geographical information systems and existing models, the project will then develop a spatial description of the EnergyScape and the key ecosystem services for the study area. Because some models are weaker than others, we will use a 'Plug and Play' framework, as used in computing, so that new and improved models can be introduced as they become available. Similarly, the approach will allow new data sources to be included as they become available. Starting from the base-line description, we will then investigate the benefits and losses associated with the deployment of different combinations of land based renewables. Because renewable energy sources have different spatial and temporal characteristics relative to the demand for energy, the outputs will not be simply additive. Similarly, there will be complex interactions between energy generation and different ecosystem services, and amongst the ecosystem services. Some interactions will be antagonistic (e.g. solar power v demand for heating; food v biofuel) whereas others may be complementary (e.g. sharing of facilities; biofuel v biodiversity). By using appropriate visualisation tools, we hope that the key interactions can be explained to stakeholder groups, who can then use the information to inform future decisions. We intend that the approach developed in this research, which will be limited to the renewables and ecosystems of a specific area, can be applied to other regions and at a national spatial scale in future research projects. To validate the academic efficacy of our approach, we will submit papers for peer review, seeking to get them published in high-impact scientific journals.

Publications

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Coleby A (2011) Environmental Impact Assessment, ecosystems services and the case of energy crops in England in Journal of Environmental Planning and Management

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Rivas Casado M (2014) Predicting the impacts of bioenergy production on farmland birds. in The Science of the total environment

 
Description High fuel prices and concerns about energy security and anthropogenic climate change are encouraging transition towards a low carbon economy. Although energy policy is typically set at a national level, tools are needed for people to engage with energy policy at regional and local levels. Tools are also needed to describe the interactions between renewable energy options and the other goods and services provided by a landscape.

The overall aim was to determine, through a pilot study, how an understanding of ecosystem services and the "energyscape" could help guide the deployment of land-based renewables. One definition of an energyscape is: "the spatial and temporal combinations of energy supply, demand and infrastructure within a landscape".

The project used a whole system approach to address four objectives:
1.To extend the ecosystem approach to the development of land-based renewables
2.To develop methods to describe an energyscape in terms of interacting resources and conflicting demands
3.To develop and demonstrate an integrated model linking an energyscape with models of key ecosystem services for a case study site
4.To identify how and where to deploy different land-based renewables in relation to specified objectives, and to recommend how the approach should be applied to other sites and situations.

Case study area: Marston Vale, a 160 km2 sub-catchment of the Great Ouse bordering Bedford and Milton Keynes, was chosen as the case study area. The predominant land use is arable agriculture. Brick manufacture has led to the excavation of clay pits, which have been flooded or used for landfill. Taking into account currently consented housing, the population density (3.1 persons/ha) is between that for England (3.9 persons/ha) and the UK (2.5 persons/ha).
Exploitation Route •Energy production and distribution is an important ecosystem service not captured in current ecosystem service classifications. In the UK, the demand for energy (on a per capita basis) is six-times greater than the combined embedded energy of food, feed and wood. Hence an ecosystem service approach to land planning that excludes energy is flawed
•The developed models can allow stakeholders to visualise the key effects of different forms of renewable energy production on food, feed, and wood production, farmland bird numbers, soil carbon, and recreational opportunity
•Further research is needed to evaluate the method at other locations and at different scales, and the economics and the net greenhouse gas balance of the various options.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Education,Energy,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description In High Education, we have used the Energyscapes and Ecosystem Services Framework, as used in Marston Vale, as a workshop exercise for 50-80 MSc students at Cranfield University each year to teach about the interactions between energy, the environment, and the agrifood sectors.
First Year Of Impact 2011
Sector Education
Impact Types Cultural

 
Description Energyscapes and ecosystem services framework used in postgraduate teaching
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Influenced training of practitioners or researchers
Impact Each year since 2012, about 30-50 postgraduate students at Cranfield University have used the Energyscape and Ecosystem Services framework in a workshop to address the trade-offs and synergies between renewable energy, food, feed, and wood, whilst reflecting on their own consumption patterns.
 
Description Presentation to Association for Geographic Information (AGI) Environment Special Interest Group Meeting, London 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Type Of Presentation paper presentation
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation made at Association for Geographic Information (AGI) Environment Special Interest Group Meeting:

"Energy and the Environment - Application of GI for a Sustainable Future" at School of Economic Science, London on 23 March 2011

Presentation made to industry and policy makers at Association of Geographical Information workshop
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2011
URL http://www.agi.org.uk/storage/events/20110323-Env/PaulBurgess.pdf