We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Alternative scenarios for the future of the Canadian boreal zone1.
- Authors
Steenberg, James W.N.; Duinker, Peter N.; Creed, Irena F.; Serran, Jacqueline N.; Ouellet Dallaire, Camille
- Abstract
In response to global climate change, Canada is transitioning towards a low-carbon economy and the need for policy approaches that are effective, equitable, coordinated, and both administratively and politically feasible is high. One point is clear; the transition is intimately tied to the vast supply of ecosystem services in the boreal zone of Canada. This paper describes four contrasting futures for the boreal zone using scenario analysis, which is a transdisciplinary, participatory approach that considers alternative futures and policy implications under conditions of high uncertainty and complexity. The two critical forces shaping the four scenarios are the global economy's energy and society's capacity to adapt. The six drivers of change are atmospheric change, the demand for provisioning ecosystem services, the demand for nonprovisioning ecosystem services, demographics, and social values, governance and geopolitics, and industrial innovation and infrastructure. The four scenarios include: (i) the Green Path, where a low-carbon economy is coupled with high adaptive capacity; (ii) the Uphill Climb, where a low-carbon economy is instead coupled with low adaptive capacity; (iii) the Carpool Lane, where society has a strong capacity to adapt but a reliance on fossil fuels; and (iv) the Slippery Slope, where there is both a high-carbon economy and a society with low adaptive capacity. The scenarios illustrate the importance of transitioning to a low-carbon economy and the role of society's adaptive capacity in doing so. However, they also emphasize themes like social inequality and adverse environmental outcomes arising from the push towards climate change mitigation.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change; ECOSYSTEM services; SOCIAL values; EQUALITY; CLIMATE change mitigation
- Publication
Environmental Reviews, 2019, Vol 27, Issue 2, p185
- ISSN
1181-8700
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/er-2018-0062