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      Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation in the Land Use Sector: From Complementarity to Synergy

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          Abstract

          Currently, mitigation and adaptation measures are handled separately, due to differences in priorities for the measures and segregated planning and implementation policies at international and national levels. There is a growing argument that synergistic approaches to adaptation and mitigation could bring substantial benefits at multiple scales in the land use sector. Nonetheless, efforts to implement synergies between adaptation and mitigation measures are rare due to the weak conceptual framing of the approach and constraining policy issues. In this paper, we explore the attributes of synergy and the necessary enabling conditions and discuss, as an example, experience with the Ngitili system in Tanzania that serves both adaptation and mitigation functions. An in-depth look into the current practices suggests that more emphasis is laid on complementarity—i.e., mitigation projects providing adaptation co-benefits and vice versa rather than on synergy. Unlike complementarity, synergy should emphasize functionally sustainable landscape systems in which adaptation and mitigation are optimized as part of multiple functions. We argue that the current practice of seeking co-benefits (complementarity) is a necessary but insufficient step toward addressing synergy. Moving forward from complementarity will require a paradigm shift from current compartmentalization between mitigation and adaptation to systems thinking at landscape scale. However, enabling policy, institutional, and investment conditions need to be developed at global, national, and local levels to achieve synergistic goals.

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          Most cited references53

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          Ecosystem service bundles for analyzing tradeoffs in diverse landscapes.

          A key challenge of ecosystem management is determining how to manage multiple ecosystem services across landscapes. Enhancing important provisioning ecosystem services, such as food and timber, often leads to tradeoffs between regulating and cultural ecosystem services, such as nutrient cycling, flood protection, and tourism. We developed a framework for analyzing the provision of multiple ecosystem services across landscapes and present an empirical demonstration of ecosystem service bundles, sets of services that appear together repeatedly. Ecosystem service bundles were identified by analyzing the spatial patterns of 12 ecosystem services in a mixed-use landscape consisting of 137 municipalities in Quebec, Canada. We identified six types of ecosystem service bundles and were able to link these bundles to areas on the landscape characterized by distinct social-ecological dynamics. Our results show landscape-scale tradeoffs between provisioning and almost all regulating and cultural ecosystem services, and they show that a greater diversity of ecosystem services is positively correlated with the provision of regulating ecosystem services. Ecosystem service-bundle analysis can identify areas on a landscape where ecosystem management has produced exceptionally desirable or undesirable sets of ecosystem services.
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            Complementarities and fit strategy, structure, and organizational change in manufacturing

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              The role of conservation agriculture in sustainable agriculture.

              The paper focuses on conservation agriculture (CA), defined as minimal soil disturbance (no-till, NT) and permanent soil cover (mulch) combined with rotations, as a more sustainable cultivation system for the future. Cultivation and tillage play an important role in agriculture. The benefits of tillage in agriculture are explored before introducing conservation tillage (CT), a practice that was borne out of the American dust bowl of the 1930s. The paper then describes the benefits of CA, a suggested improvement on CT, where NT, mulch and rotations significantly improve soil properties and other biotic factors. The paper concludes that CA is a more sustainable and environmentally friendly management system for cultivating crops. Case studies from the rice-wheat areas of the Indo-Gangetic Plains of South Asia and the irrigated maize-wheat systems of Northwest Mexico are used to describe how CA practices have been used in these two environments to raise production sustainably and profitably. Benefits in terms of greenhouse gas emissions and their effect on global warming are also discussed. The paper concludes that agriculture in the next decade will have to sustainably produce more food from less land through more efficient use of natural resources and with minimal impact on the environment in order to meet growing population demands. Promoting and adopting CA management systems can help meet this goal.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +254-207224578 , l.a.duguma@cgiar.org
                a.minang@cgiar.org
                m.vannoordwijk@cgiar.org
                Journal
                Environ Manage
                Environ Manage
                Environmental Management
                Springer US (Boston )
                0364-152X
                1432-1009
                22 July 2014
                22 July 2014
                2014
                : 54
                : 420-432
                Affiliations
                [ ]ASB Partnership for the Tropical Forest Margins and World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), United Nations Avenue, Gigiri, 30677, Nairobi, 00100 Kenya
                [ ]ASB Partnership for the Tropical Forest Margins and World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), 161, Jalan Cifor, Situgede, Bogor, 16001 Indonesia
                Article
                331
                10.1007/s00267-014-0331-x
                4129237
                25047275
                9589d5e4-801b-4787-9e1a-80a8655df9b1
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                : 15 July 2013
                : 2 July 2014
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014

                Environmental management, Policy & Planning
                adaptation,complementarity,land use,mitigation,synergy,systems thinking

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