2021
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105181
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Indicators of Land, Water, Energy and Food (LWEF) Nexus Resource Drivers: A Perspective on Environmental Degradation in the Gidabo Watershed, Southern Ethiopia

Abstract: In Ethiopia, land, water, energy and food (LWEF) nexus resources are under pressure due to population growth, urbanization and unplanned consumption. The effect of this pressure has been a widely discussed topic in nexus resource literature. The evidence shows the predominantly negative impact of this; however, the impact of these factors is less explored from a local scale. As a result, securing nexus resources is becoming a serious challenge for the country. This necessitates the identification of the drivin… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…land, climate, soil). For example, Wolde et al (2021) focused on the land, water, energy and food (LWEF) nexus. In fact, 99 documents, reflecting approximately 13% of the total, considered sectors in addition to water‐energy‐food (+ other sector).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…land, climate, soil). For example, Wolde et al (2021) focused on the land, water, energy and food (LWEF) nexus. In fact, 99 documents, reflecting approximately 13% of the total, considered sectors in addition to water‐energy‐food (+ other sector).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An example of a WEF publication that mentioned governance is a publication by Sušnik et al (2021), where they integrate policies, developed with relevant stakeholders to the model. An example of a WEF publication that captured gender is a publication by Wolde et al (2021) who analysed the impact of land, water, energy and food Nexus degradation on socioeconomic characteristics (including gender).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To further explore the influencing factors of water and land resources system efficiency, we selected population density, urbanization level, proportion of output value of secondary and tertiary industries, effective irrigation rate, proportion of construction land, and per land pesticide application as independent variables and annual overall efficiency values of water and land resources system in 31 provincial administrative regions as dependent variables to establish regression model [31][32][33][34]. After selecting the potential drivers, we performed collinearity diagnosis based on the ordinary least squares (OLS) regression model and eliminated potential drivers with a variance inflation factor (VIF) greater than 7.5.…”
Section: Geographically Weighted Regression (Gwr) Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The growth in the global human population exceeds the food required in terms of quantities produced, availability, and accessibility not only due to a decrease in fertile, available arable land for food production, which is utilized for the construction of modern infrastructures but also due to the vulnerability of food systems to climate change (Sorvali et al, 2021;Sadigov, 2022), with water and energy becoming the limiting factors (Nassary et al, 2020). At the same insight, global food production needs to be increased by 70% by 2050 to meet the food demand of 9.5 billion people (Kopittke et al, 2019;Wolde et al, 2021). To ensure food security in terms of quantity produced, accessibility, availability, and nutrients, the agricultural output needs to be optimized to meet the global rise in food demand (Aloo et al, 2021;Nakei et al, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%