29 research outputs found

    MobilitÀtsverhalten der Wohnbevölkerung in AbhÀngigkeit von der ZentralitÀt des Ortes

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    Der Beitrag analysiert die Wechselwirkungen der ZentralitĂ€t eines Ortes mit der AlltagsmobilitĂ€t im Bundesland Oberösterreich. FĂŒr die im Oberösterreichischen Landesraumordnungsprogramm festgelegten ZentralitĂ€tsstufen wird auf Basis der Oberösterreichischen Verkehrserhebung das MobilitĂ€tsverhalten der Wohnbevölkerung ab sechs Jahren an einem typischen Werktag nĂ€her betrachtet. Die Untersuchung zeigt, dass sich rĂ€umliche Strukturen auf den Anteil der Binnenwege an der Gesamtwegezahl, auf die mittlere WegehĂ€ufigkeit pro Person und Tag und auf die Verkehrsmittelwahl auswirken. Hingegen verhĂ€lt sich die Verteilung der Wegzwecke in allen ZentralitĂ€tsstufen sehr Ă€hnlich. The article in hand analyses the interrelation between the centrality of a place and the traffic behaviour of its residents in everyday life. The evaluation is conducted for the province of Upper Austria which is situated in the northwest of Austria. The Upper Austrian Planning Programme determines four levels of centrality. For each level the traffic behaviour of the residents being six years of age and over is analysed for an average workday. The evaluation is based on the Upper Austrian Mobility Survey and shows that existing spatial structures affect the number of trips per person per day, the number of internal trips as well as the modal split. The purposes of the trips are similar within all levels of centrality. Document type: Boo

    Partizipation und Stakeholder-Beteiligung in der Pilotregion Mostviertel: WP3 Synthesebericht

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    Aufgabe eines Partizipativen Regional Integrierten VulnerabilitĂ€tsassessments (PRIVAS) ist es, in Zusammenarbeit mit Stakeholdern die integrative Wissensproduktion bei einem komplexen Mensch-Umwelt-Problem wie dem Klimawandel zu optimieren. Dieses Ziel stellt jedes Projekt vor konzeptive, methodische, prozessuale und forschungspraktische Herausforderungen, denen sich RIVAS in der Testregion gestellt hat. Auf Basis der Analyse und Erfahrungen aus 14 nationalen und internationalen VulnerabilitĂ€tsassessments und der einschlĂ€gigen wissenschaftlichen Literatur wurde ein experimentelles Ablaufdesign fĂŒr ein PRIVAS erstellt, welches im Mostviertel in einer Laufzeit von ĂŒber einem Jahr umgesetzt wurde. Den Kern der Stakeholderinteraktionen bildete eine Referenzgruppe, die sich aus Akteuren der Demosektoren Land-, Wasser- und Forstwirtschaft, dem Regionalmanagement und des Projektteams zusammensetzte. Die Referenzgruppe war zentraler Kommunikationsort, wo eine Dialog- und Konsensorientierung vorherrschte. Die partizipativen AnknĂŒpfungspunkte der Personen aus der Referenzgruppe im VulnerabilitĂ€tsassessment waren unterschiedlich ausgeformt und gewichtet, da in RIVAS einige innovative und konzeptive Überlegungen getestet werden sollten. Der Schwerpunkt dabei wurde auf die partizipative Problemformulierung und Eingrenzung der Untersuchungsfragen (Phase „zu Beginn“ eines Assessments) sowie auf die Methodenanwendung und Analyse (Phase „wĂ€hrend“ eines Assessments) gelegt. Eines der zentralen Ergebnisse von RIVAS ist, dass nicht nur das Produkt und die Ergebnisse einer VulnerabilitĂ€tsbewertung Wissen und VerstĂ€ndnis schaffen, sondern dass zumindest gleichberechtigt auch der strukturierte Prozess fĂŒr die Verbreitung, Aufnahme und den Transfer von Informationen und Wissen verantwortlich ist. Der Prozesscharakter solcher Interaktionen optimiert nicht nur die QualitĂ€t und Nutzbarkeit der Projektergebnisse, sondern unterstĂŒtzt auch ein soziales Lernen und begĂŒnstigt langfristige Wirkungen, die weit ĂŒber die Projektlaufzeit hinausreichen. Neben den bereits in der Literatur vielfach beschrieben organisatorischen Rahmenbedingungen (Transparenz, RegelmĂ€ĂŸigkeit, Langfristigkeit, VertrauenswĂŒrdigkeit, Interaktionsregeln und -techniken, ZeitplĂ€ne, etc.) ist vor allem der Grad der Partizipation ein entscheidendes Kriterium, welches fĂŒr den Erfolg oder Misserfolg eines PRIVAS verantwortlich ist. In welchen Bereichen des VulnerabilitĂ€tsassessments eine Mitbestimmung von Stakeholdern auf der Ebene der Information, Konsultation oder Mitbestimmung stattfinden soll, muss nicht nur frĂŒhzeitig und entlang der BedĂŒrfnisse der Stakeholder und WissenschafterInnen abgestimmt werden, sondern sollte insbesondere immer einer zielgerichteten Entscheidung unterliegen, die auf den Zweck der Partizipation fokussiert. Ein weiteres Attribut fĂŒr das Gelingen eines PRIVAS ist eine regel- und gleichmĂ€ĂŸige Partizipation der Stakeholder. Das Projekt zeigt auf, dass die Institutionalisierung der Beteiligung vor allem durch die Bildung der Referenzgruppe gewĂ€hrleistet werden konnte. DarĂŒber hinaus hat die Einbindung eines regionalen ProzesstrĂ€gers – des Regionalmanagements Mostviertel – entscheidend zur Beteiligungsmotivation beigetragen. Die Partizipation an einem Prozess und nicht nur die punktuellen Beteiligung an einem Projekt stand damit im Vordergrund. Schlussendlich mĂŒssen sich alle Partizipationsverfahren in einem PRIVAS dahingehend rechtfertigen, ob der notwendige Aufwand an Kosten und Zeit in einem angemessenen VerhĂ€ltnis zu den Ergebnissen steht, und ob die im Projekt angestrebten Ziele auch erreicht wurden. Beides kann mit Hilfe der nach Abschluss des regionalen Projektteils durchgefĂŒhrten Evaluation der Stakeholderbeteiligung fĂŒr RIVAS positiv bestĂ€tigt werden

    Pesticide use under the influence of socio-economic and climate change: Pest-Agri-SSPs

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    Pesticide use is a crucial human-driven change in the Anthropocene that negatively impacts the environment and ecosystems. While pesticides are essential to agriculture to sustain crop production and ensure global food security, they also lead to significant environmental impacts. The export of pesticides after application from the agricultural fields threatens the soil, groundwater and surface water quality in many world regions. Pesticide use is constantly increasing globally, driven mainly by agricultural intensification, despite stricter regulations and higher pesticide effectiveness. To enhance the understanding of future pesticide use and emissions and make informed farm-to-policy decisions, we developed Pesticide Agricultural Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (Pest-Agri-SSPs) in six steps. The Pest-Agri-SSPs are based on an extensive literature review and expert knowledge, considering significant climate and socio-economic drivers from farm to continental scale in combination with multiple actors impacting them. In the literature, pesticide use is associated with farmer behaviour and agricultural practices, pest damage, technique and efficiency of pesticide application, agricultural policy and demand for agricultural products. Here, we developed Pest-Agri-SSPs upon this understanding of pesticide use drivers and relating them to plausible sectoral developments, as described by the Shared Socio-economic Pathways for European agriculture and food systems (Eur-Agri-SSPs). The Pest-Agri-SSPs present European pesticide use in five scenarios with low to high challenges to climate change adaptation and mitigation up to 2050. The most sustainable scenario (Pest-Agri-SSP1) shows a decrease in pesticide use owing to sustainable agricultural practices, technological advances and a pro-environmental orientation of agricultural policies. On the contrary, the Pest-Agri-SSP3 and Pest-Agri-SSP4 show an increase in pesticide use resulting from high challenges from pest pressure, resource depletion and relaxed agricultural policies. Pest-Agri-SSP2 presents a stabilised pesticide use resulting from strict policies and slow transitions by farmers to sustainable agricultural practices. Pest-Agri-SSP5 shows a decrease in pesticide use for most drivers, influenced mainly by rapid technological development and the application of sustainable agricultural practices. However, Pest-Agri-SSP5 also shows a relatively low rise in pesticide use driven by agricultural demand, production, and climate change. Our results highlight the need for a holistic approach to tackle pesticide use and emissions, considering the identified drivers and future developments. The storylines and qualitative assessment provide a platform to make quantitative assumptions for numerical modelling and evaluating policy targets

    Extending shared socio-economic pathways for pesticide use in Europe: Pest-Agri-SSPs

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    While pesticides are essential to agriculture and food systems to sustain current production levels, they also lead to significant environmental impacts. The use of pesticides is constantly increasing globally, driven mainly by a further intensification of agriculture, despite stricter regulations and higher pesticide effectiveness. To further the understanding of future pesticide use and make informed farm-to-policy decisions, we developed Pesticide Agricultural Shared Socio-economic Pathways (Pest-AgriSSPs) in six steps. The Pest-Agri-SSPs are developed based on an extensive literature review and expert feedback approach considering significant climate and socio-economic drivers from farm to continental scale in combination with multiple actors impacting them. In literature, pesticide use is associated with farmer behaviour and practices, pest damage, technique and efficiency of pesticide application, agricultural policy and agriculture demand and production. Here, we developed PestAgri-SSPs upon this understanding of pesticide use drivers and relating them to possible agriculture development as described by the Shared Socio-economic Pathways for European agriculture and food systems (Eur-Agri-SSPs).The Pest-AgriSSPs are developed to explore European pesticide use in five scenarios representing low to high challenges to mitigation and adaptation up to 2050. The most sustainable scenario (Pest-Agri-SSP1) shows a decrease in pesticide use owing to sustainable agricultural practices, technological advances and better implementation of agricultural policies. On the contrary, the Pest-Agri-SSP3 and Pest-Agri-SSP4 show a higher increase in pesticide use resulting from higher challenges from pest pressure, resource depletion and relaxed agricultural policies. Pest-Agri-SSP2 presents a stabilised pesticide use resulting from stricter policies and slow transitions by farmers to sustainable agricultural practices. At the same time, pest pressure, climate change and food demand pose serious challenges. Pest-Agri-SSP5 shows a decrease in pesticide use for most drivers, influenced mainly by rapid technological development and sustainable agricultural practices. However, Pest-Agri-SSP5 also presents a relatively low rise in pesticide use driven by agricultural demand, production, and climate change. Our results highlight the need for a holistic approach to tackle pesticide use, considering the identified drivers and future developments. The storylines and qualitative assessment provide a platform to make quantitative assumptions for numerical modelling and evaluating policy targets

    Ten principles to integrate the water-energy-land nexus with climate services for co-producing local and regional integrated assessments

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    The water-energy-land nexus requires long-sighted approaches that help avoid maladaptive pathways to ensure its promise to deliver insights and tools that improve policy-making. Climate services can form the foundation to avoid myopia in nexus studies by providing information about how climate change will alter the balance of nexus resources and the nature of their interactions. Nexus studies can help climate services by providing information about the implications of climate-informed decisions for other economic sectors across nexus resources. First-of-its-kind guidance is provided to combine nexus studies and climate services. The guidance consists of ten principles and a visual guide, which are discussed together with questions to compare diverse case studies and with examples to support the application of the principles

    A protocol to develop shared socio-economic pathways for European agriculture

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    Moving towards a more sustainable future requires concerted actions, particularly in the context of global climate change. Integrated assessments of agricultural systems (IAAS) are considered valuable tools to provide sound information for policy and decision-making. IAAS use storylines to define socio-economic and environmental framework assumptions. While a set of qualitative global storylines, known as the Shared Socio-economic Pathways (SSPs), is available to inform integrated assessments at large scales, their spatial resolution and scope is insufficient for regional studies in agriculture. We present a protocol to operationalize the development of Shared Socio-economic Pathways for European agriculture – Eur-Agri-SSPs – to support IAAS. The proposed design of the storyline development process is based on six quality criteria: plausibility, vertical and horizontal consistency, salience, legitimacy, richness and creativity. Trade-offs between these criteria may occur. The process is science-driven and iterative to enhance plausibility and horizontal consistency. A nested approach is suggested to link storylines across scales while maintaining vertical consistency. Plausibility, legitimacy, salience, richness and creativity shall be stimulated in a participatory and interdisciplinary storyline development process. The quality criteria and process design requirements are combined in the protocol to increase conceptual and methodological transparency. The protocol specifies nine working steps. For each step, suitable methods are proposed and the intended level and format of stakeholder engagement are discussed. A key methodological challenge is to link global SSPs with regional perspectives provided by the stakeholders, while maintaining vertical consistency and stakeholder buy-in. We conclude that the protocol facilitates systematic development and evaluation of storylines, which can be transferred to other regions, sectors and scales and supports inter-comparisons of IAAS
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