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Special Issue on

Critical Thinking on the ‘New Security Convergence’ in Energy, Food, Climate and Water:
Is the Nexus Secure … and for Whom?

With the financial support of the ESRC funded STEPS Centre

Guest Editors:
Jeremy Allouche (IDS STEPS Centre)
Dipak Gyawali (Nepal Water Conservation Foundation)
Carl Middleton (Chulalongkorn University)

The concept of the ‘nexus’ has gained salience over time, through the Bonn Conference in 2011, the Sixth World Water Forum in Marseilles, France and the Rio +20 negotiations in 2012, making it the new vocabulary to define sustainable development (Gies, 2012). The idea started with the World Economic Forum in 2008 and the different resource ‘crises’ in terms of food and energy. In a nutshell, nexus underpins the acute pressure on world’s natural resources generated through a combination of factors as climate change and the human response to climate change, global demographic trends of burgeoning population size and increased consumption levels. The ‘nexus’ debate is primarily a debate about natural resource scarcity.

The nexus approach highlights the interdependence of water, energy and food security and the natural resources that underpin that security - such as soil, land, and nutrient cycles. The German government was promoting the concept at Bonn then Rio based on the belief that a better understanding of the interdependence of water, energy and climate policy will provide an informed and transparent framework for determining trade-offs and synergies that meet demand without compromising sustainability.

Water security remains central to the concept of nexus; in short food and energy security can only be achieved through water security. Climate change is a string amplifier but not the primary driver for change (Bogardi, 2012). The concept has led to the proliferation of high-level workshops, seminars and conferences, as well as new policies and perspective papers from the Global Water Partnership, World Economic Forum and the German Government (to name a few) that make the nexus and water security out to be the new ‘development imperative’.

The impact of this new “WEF nexus” concept is uncertain but the links between water, energy and climate create a renewed interest for project around hydropower and storage. Lall (World Economic Forum, 2011) argues that in the backdrop of climate change and climate variability, the key question that global society faces is “how should our water best be stored and which stores should be used to minimize risks due to long term climate variability and change?” Storage is argued to guarantee reliability in water supply, which in turn means food security, electricity generation and industrial growth.

Water Alternatives will publish a special issue on Critical Thinking On the ‘New Security Convergence’ in Energy, Food, Climate and Water. We invite papers both from academics and practitioners that could be published as part of this special issue. Specifically, the papers should seek to address one or several of the following points:

Timeline

Contact the guest-editors

Jeremy Allouche (STEPS Centre, IDS), j.allouche@ids.ac.uk
Dipak Gyawali (Nepal Water Conservation Foundation), gyawalidipak@gmail.com
Carl Middleton (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), carl.m@chula.ac.th

or send your abstract to: managing_editor@water-alternatives.org

Full papers can be develooped following WaA editorial guidelines