Assessing health, livelihoods, ecosystem services and poverty alleviation in populous deltas

Lead Research Organisation: University of Exeter
Department Name: Geography

Abstract

Delta regions are probably the most vulnerable type of coastal environment and their ecosystem services face multiple stresses in the coming decades. These stresses include, amongst others, local drivers due to land subsidence, population growth and urbanisation within the deltas, regional drivers due to changes in catchment management (e.g. upstream land use and dam construction), and global climate change impacts such as sea-level rise.The ecosystem services of river deltas support high population densities, estimated at over 500 million people globally, with particular concentrations in Southern and Eastern Asia and Africa. A large proportion of these people experience extremes of poverty and are severely exposed to vulnerability from environmental and ecological stress and degradation. In areas close to or below the poverty boundary, both subsistence and cash elements of the economy tend to rely disproportionately heavily on ecosystem services which underpin livelihoods.Understanding how to sustainably manage the ecosystem services in delta regions and thus improve health and reduce poverty and vulnerability requires consideration of all these stresses and their complex interaction. This proposal aims to develop methods to understand and characterise the key drivers of change in ecosystem services that affect the environment and economic status in the world's populous deltas. This will be done through analysis of the evolving role of ecosystem services, exploring the implications of changes for the livelihoods of delta residents, and developing management and policy options that will be beneficial now and in the future in the face of the large uncertainties of the next few decades and beyond.The extensive coastal fringe of the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Delta within Bangladesh has been selected as the pilot study area for this work. This is because Bangladesh is almost entirely located on one of the world's largest and most dynamic deltas. It is characterised by densely populated coastal lowlands with significant poverty, supported to a large extent by natural ecosystems such as the Sunderbahns (the largest mangrove forest in the world). It is under severe development pressure due to many growing cities, eg Khulna and the capital, Dhaka.At present the importance of ecosystems services to poverty and livelihoods is poorly understood. This is due to due to the complexity of interactions between physical drivers, environmental pressures and the human responses to stresses and the resultant impacts on ecosystems. Government policy rarely takes up the ecosystems services perspective and as a result an holistic overview of their value is often overlooked.This project aims to address this gap by providing policy makers with the knowledge and tools to enable them to evaluate the effects of policy decisions on people's livelihoods. This will be done by creating a holistic approach to formally evaluating ecosystems services and poverty in the context of changes such as subsidence and sea level rise, land degradation and population pressure in delta regions. This will be tested and applied in coastal Bangladesh and tested conceptually in other populous deltas.

Planned Impact

Refer to Lead Research Organisation Application

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Research at the University of Exeter is one of the social science components of a larger, multi-institutional and interdisciplinary project "Assessing health, livelihoods, ecosystem services and poverty alleviation in populous deltas." The data and analysis has concentrated on investigating the processes that link ecosystem services and wellbeing. To date we have developed working models and hypotheses on the relationships between ecosystem services and poverty, informed by extensive data collection in the study area in the southwest coastal zone of Bangladesh.


This research analyses the relationship between ecosystem services and multiple dimensions of well-being across landscapes of diverse socio-ecological systems. Ecosystem services are often promoted as a means to alleviate poverty as part of a diverse household livelihood mix. This research investigates the level of ecosystem service dependence most associated with positive material and subjective well-being outcomes. Results show that the well-being outcome of ecosystem service dependence depends on the social and ecological context of livelihood systems and the type of well-being: material poverty and subjective well-being show different patterns. Therefore, for development interventions based on ecosystem services to be effective, they should consider the wider socio-ecological system in which the household is located, and the dimension of poverty being addressed.
Exploitation Route As highlighted above the ESPA programme by its very nature is action oriented. The analysis of the processes that allow or prevent ecosystem services to improve wellbeing are important for natural resources managers across the globe. This research comes under the Ecosystem Services and Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) programme that aims specifically to provide new knowledge on how ecosystem services can reduce poverty and enhance well-being for the world's poor. We have designed outputs of the project are, therefore, designed to be development-ready and to help improve decision-making on ecosystem services.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Environment

URL http://www.espadeltas.net
 
Description The project has had direct engagement with the government of Bangladesh through its GED as input into the twenty year Delta Plan for the country. This has been through stakeholder meetings, public events and through discussions concerning the use of the integrated model at the heart of the project outputs. This has been ongoing and has involved both the Exeter led social analysis and all substantive findings of the project. Research assistants from three institutions involved in the project (the Institute for Water and Flood Management at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology; Institute of Livelihood Studies and the Ashroy Foundation) have been trained and mentored in qualitative research methods Capacity building in social science research methods for research assistants associated with the project, across three partner institutions. A day long workshop was held with attendance of six research assistants, plus training while in the field.
First Year Of Impact 2013
Sector Environment
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia
Amount £350,000 (GBP)
Organisation Government of the UK 
Department Department for International Development (DfID)
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2014 
End 06/2018
 
Description Ecosystem Services and Poverty Alleviation - Capacity Building Fellowship
Amount £100,000 (GBP)
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2014 
End 05/2016