Artículos de revistas
Water–food–energy nexus tradeoffs in the São Marcos river basin
Date
2021Registration in:
Water 2021, 13, 817
10.3390/w13060817
Author
Henrique Bof, Pedro
Fernades Marques, Guilherme
Tilmant, Amaury
Dalcin, Ana Paula
Olivares Acuña, Marcelo Osvaldo
Institutions
Abstract
Given its potentialities and characteristics, energy generation, food production, and water
availability have a strong interdependency and correlation. Water is needed to produce energy
and food, while energy is required to produce water and food. This nexus brings several challenges
when scarce water resources must be allocated among competing uses, often in the form
of unexpected tradeoffs. Addressing those challenges requires knowledge about the water–food–
energy nexus and the associated tradeoffs to support water allocation and management decisions.
Those tradeoffs are still not properly understood in the uncertain and stochastic context of water
availability. When not properly accounted for, the results are conflicts, loss of investments,
environmental impacts, and limited effectiveness of sectoral policies, all of which undermine a country’s
development model relying on water and energy security. This paper addresses the competitive
uses of recent irrigated agriculture expansion and existing hydropower production in a Brazilian
watershed with water conflicts, assessing the economic tradeoffs and water values between energy
and irrigated agricultural production under uncertainty. An explicitly stochastic hydro-economic
model is used to determine water’s economic value and its variation in space and time. Results indicate
that the agricultural benefits outweigh the potential energy losses, and the best course of action
should explore an economically compensated reallocation strategy, upon negotiation among users,
rather than imposing water supply cutbacks to the agriculture sector.