Mapping global development potential for renewable energy, fossil fuels, mining and agriculture sectors

Published Article

Global

Publication date: June 27, 2019

File format: PDF

Mapping suitable land for development is key to balancing economic growth and environmental protection. We present global Development Potential Indices for 13 sectors—renewable energy, fossil fuels, mining, and agriculture—using spatial analysis to reveal patterns and inform sustainable planning.

Subject Tags

  • Land management
  • Conservation Planning
  • Renewable energy

Abstract

Mapping suitable land for development is essential to land use planning efforts that aim to model, anticipate, and manage trade-offs between economic development and the environment. Previous land suitability assessments have generally focused on a few development sectors or lack consistent methodologies, thereby limiting our ability to plan for cumulative development pressures across geographic regions. Here, we generated 1-km spatially-explicit global land suitability maps, referred to as “development potential indices” (DPIs), for 13 sectors related to renewable energy (concentrated solar power, photovoltaic solar, wind, hydropower), fossil fuels (coal, conventional and unconventional oil and gas), mining (metallic, non-metallic), and agriculture (crop, biofuels expansion). To do so, we applied spatial multi-criteria decision analysis techniques that accounted for both resource potential and development feasibility. For each DPI, we examined both uncertainty and sensitivity, and spatially validated the map using locations of planned development. We illustrate how these DPIs can be used to elucidate potential individual sector expansion and cumulative development patterns.

Citation

Oakleaf, J. R., Kennedy, C. M., Baruch-Mordo, S., Gerber, J. S., West, P. C., Johnson, J. A., & Kiesecker, J. (2019). Mapping global development potential for renewable energy, fossil fuels, mining and agriculture sectors. Scientific data6(1), 101.

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-019-0084-8

TNC Authors

  • James Oakleaf
    Applied Geoinfomatics Scientist, Protect Oceans, Lands and Waters
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: joakleaf@tnc.org

  • Christina M. Kennedy
    Global Director of Spatial Conservation Science, Global Science
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: ckennedy@tnc.org

  • Joseph Kiesecker
    The Nature Conservancy