PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

The Paris pledges and the energy-water-land nexus in Latin America: Exploring implications of greenhouse gas emission reductions.

  • Silvia R Santos Da Silva,
  • Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm,
  • Raul Muñoz-Castillo,
  • Leon E Clarke,
  • Caleb J Braun,
  • Alison Delgado,
  • James A Edmonds,
  • Mohamad Hejazi,
  • Jill Horing,
  • Russell Horowitz,
  • Page Kyle,
  • Robert Link,
  • Pralit Patel,
  • Sean Turner,
  • Haewon C McJeon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e0215013

Abstract

Read online

In the 2015 Paris Agreement, nations worldwide pledged emissions reductions (Nationally Determined Contributions-NDCs) to avert the threat of climate change, and agreed to periodically review these pledges to strengthen their level of ambition. Previous studies have analyzed NDCs largely in terms of their implied contribution to limit global warming, their implications on the energy sector or on mitigation costs. Nevertheless, a gap in the literature exists regarding the understanding of implications of the NDCs on countries' Energy-Water-Land nexus resource systems. The present paper explores this angle within the regional context of Latin America by employing the Global Change Assessment Model, a state-of-the-art integrated assessment model capable of representing key system-wide interactions among nexus sectors and mitigation policies. By focusing on Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Colombia, we stress potential implications on national-level water demands depending on countries' strategies to enforce energy-related emissions reductions and their interplays with the land sector. Despite the differential implications of the Paris pledges on each country, increased water demands for crop and biomass irrigation and for electricity generation stand out as potential trade-offs that may emerge under the NDC policy. Hence, this study underscores the need of considering a nexus resource planning framework (known as "Nexus Approach") in the forthcoming NDCs updating cycles as a mean to contribute toward sustainable development.