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a retrospective of activities and advances to 2019 : a retrospective of activities and advances to 2019

Authors :
Ramos, Eunice
Howells, Mark
Sridharan, Vignesh
Engström, Rebecka
Taliotis, Constantinos
Mentis, Dimitris
Gardumi, Francesco
de Strasser, Lucia
Pappis, Ioannis
Pena Balderrama, J. Gabriela
Almulla, Youssef
Beltramo, Agnese
Ramirez Gomez, Camilo
Sundin, Caroline
Alfstad, Thomas
Lipponen, Annukka
Zepeda, Eduardo
Niet, Taco
Quiros-Tortos, Jairo
Angulo-Paniagua, Jam
Shivakumar, Abhishek
Ulloa, Silvia
Rogner, Hans-Holger
Ramos, Eunice
Howells, Mark
Sridharan, Vignesh
Engström, Rebecka
Taliotis, Constantinos
Mentis, Dimitris
Gardumi, Francesco
de Strasser, Lucia
Pappis, Ioannis
Pena Balderrama, J. Gabriela
Almulla, Youssef
Beltramo, Agnese
Ramirez Gomez, Camilo
Sundin, Caroline
Alfstad, Thomas
Lipponen, Annukka
Zepeda, Eduardo
Niet, Taco
Quiros-Tortos, Jairo
Angulo-Paniagua, Jam
Shivakumar, Abhishek
Ulloa, Silvia
Rogner, Hans-Holger
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Population growth, urbanization and economic development drive the use of resources. Securing access to essential services such as energy, water, and food, while achieving sustainable development, require that policy and planning processes follow an integrated approach. The 'Climate-, Land-, Energy- and Water-systems' (CLEWs) framework assists the exploration of interactions between (and within) CLEW systems via quantitative means. The approach was first introduced by the International Atomic Energy Agency to conduct an integrated systems analysis of a biofuel chain. The framework assists the exploration of interactions between (and within) CLEW systems via quantitative means. Its multi-institutional application to the case of Mauritius in 2012 initiated the deployment of the framework. A vast number of completed and ongoing applications of CLEWs span different spatial and temporal scales, discussing two or more resource interactions under different political contexts. Also, the studies vary in purpose. This shapes the methods that support CLEWs-type analyses. In this paper, we detail the main steps of the CLEWs framework in perspective to its application over the years. We summarise and compare key applications, both published in the scientific literature, as working papers and reports by international organizations. We discuss differences in terms of geographic scope, purpose, interactions represented, analytical approach and stakeholder involvement. In addition, we review other assessments, which contributed to the advancement of the CLEWs framework. The paper delivers recommendations for the future development of the framework, as well as keys to success in this type of evaluations.<br />QC 20210401

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1248707998
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088.1748-9326.abd34f