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Reviewing the interface of bioeconomy and ecosystem service research

D’Amato, Dalia ; Bartkowski, Bartosz and Droste, Nils LU orcid (2020) In Ambio 49(12). p.1878-1896
Abstract

The bioeconomy is currently being globally promoted as a sustainability avenue involving several societal actors. While the bioeconomy is broadly about the substitution of fossil resources with bio-based ones, three main (competing or complementary) bioeconomy visions are emerging in scientific literature: resource, biotechnology, and agroecology. The implementation of one or more of these visions into strategies implies changes to land use and thus ecosystem services delivery, with notable trade-offs. This review aims to explore the interdisciplinary space at the interface of these two concepts. We reviewed scientific publications explicitly referring to bioeconomy and ecosystem services in their title, abstract, or keywords, with 45... (More)

The bioeconomy is currently being globally promoted as a sustainability avenue involving several societal actors. While the bioeconomy is broadly about the substitution of fossil resources with bio-based ones, three main (competing or complementary) bioeconomy visions are emerging in scientific literature: resource, biotechnology, and agroecology. The implementation of one or more of these visions into strategies implies changes to land use and thus ecosystem services delivery, with notable trade-offs. This review aims to explore the interdisciplinary space at the interface of these two concepts. We reviewed scientific publications explicitly referring to bioeconomy and ecosystem services in their title, abstract, or keywords, with 45 documents identified as relevant. The literature appeared to be emerging and fragmented but eight themes were discernible (in order of decreasing occurrence frequency in the literature): a. technical and economic feasibility of biomass extraction and use; b. potential and challenges of the bioeconomy; c. frameworks and tools; d. sustainability of bio-based processes, products, and services; e. environmental sustainability of the bioeconomy; f. governance of the bioeconomy; g. biosecurity; h. bioremediation. Approximately half of the documents aligned to a resource vision of the bioeconomy, with emphasis on biomass production. Agroecology and biotechnology visions were less frequently found, but multiple visions generally tended to occur in each document. The discussion highlights gaps in the current research on the topic and argues for communication between the ecosystem services and bioeconomy communities to forward both research areas in the context of sustainability science.

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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Agroecology, Biotechnology, Circular bioeconomy, Green economy, Natural capital, Sustainability transformations
in
Ambio
volume
49
issue
12
pages
19 pages
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • pmid:33044700
  • scopus:85092441594
ISSN
0044-7447
DOI
10.1007/s13280-020-01374-0
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b89e4bba-1f8f-47c4-ab56-7bfa9642c8ef
date added to LUP
2020-10-24 07:08:40
date last changed
2024-11-01 12:58:05
@article{b89e4bba-1f8f-47c4-ab56-7bfa9642c8ef,
  abstract     = {{<p>The bioeconomy is currently being globally promoted as a sustainability avenue involving several societal actors. While the bioeconomy is broadly about the substitution of fossil resources with bio-based ones, three main (competing or complementary) bioeconomy visions are emerging in scientific literature: resource, biotechnology, and agroecology. The implementation of one or more of these visions into strategies implies changes to land use and thus ecosystem services delivery, with notable trade-offs. This review aims to explore the interdisciplinary space at the interface of these two concepts. We reviewed scientific publications explicitly referring to bioeconomy and ecosystem services in their title, abstract, or keywords, with 45 documents identified as relevant. The literature appeared to be emerging and fragmented but eight themes were discernible (in order of decreasing occurrence frequency in the literature): a. technical and economic feasibility of biomass extraction and use; b. potential and challenges of the bioeconomy; c. frameworks and tools; d. sustainability of bio-based processes, products, and services; e. environmental sustainability of the bioeconomy; f. governance of the bioeconomy; g. biosecurity; h. bioremediation. Approximately half of the documents aligned to a resource vision of the bioeconomy, with emphasis on biomass production. Agroecology and biotechnology visions were less frequently found, but multiple visions generally tended to occur in each document. The discussion highlights gaps in the current research on the topic and argues for communication between the ecosystem services and bioeconomy communities to forward both research areas in the context of sustainability science.</p>}},
  author       = {{D’Amato, Dalia and Bartkowski, Bartosz and Droste, Nils}},
  issn         = {{0044-7447}},
  keywords     = {{Agroecology; Biotechnology; Circular bioeconomy; Green economy; Natural capital; Sustainability transformations}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{12}},
  pages        = {{1878--1896}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Ambio}},
  title        = {{Reviewing the interface of bioeconomy and ecosystem service research}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01374-0}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s13280-020-01374-0}},
  volume       = {{49}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}