Mapping supply of and demand for ecosystem services to assess environmental justice in New York City

被引:69
|
作者
Herreros-Cantis, Pablo [1 ]
McPhearson, Timon [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] New Sch, Urban Syst Lab, 79 5th Ave 16, New York, NY 10003 USA
[2] Cary Inst Ecosyst Studies, Box AB, Millbrook, NY 12545 USA
[3] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Kraftriket 2B, S-11419 Stockholm, Sweden
基金
瑞典研究理事会; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
cities; climate change adaptation; regulating ecosystem services; resilience; spatial analysis; urban ecosystem services; CLIMATE-CHANGE; AIR-QUALITY; GREEN SPACES; URBAN; LANDSCAPE; HEALTH; HAZARDS; EQUITY; VULNERABILITY; VEGETATION;
D O I
10.1002/eap.2390
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Livability, resilience, and justice in cities are challenged by climate change and the historical legacies that together create disproportionate impacts on human communities. Urban green infrastructure has emerged as an important tool for climate change adaptation and resilience given their capacity to provide ecosystem services such as local temperature regulation, stormwater mitigation, and air purification. However, realizing the benefits of ecosystem services for climate adaptation depend on where they are locally supplied. Few studies have examined the potential spatial mismatches in supply and demand of urban ecosystem services, and even fewer have examined supply-demand mismatches as a potential environmental justice issue, such as when supply-demand mismatches disproportionately overlap with certain socio-demographic groups. We spatially analyzed demand for ecosystem services relevant for climate change adaptation and combined results with recent analysis of the supply of ecosystem services in New York City (NYC). By quantifying the relative mismatch between supply and demand of ecosystem services across the city we were able to identify spatial hot- and coldspots of supply-demand mismatch. Hotspots are spatial clusters of census blocks with a higher mismatch and coldspots are clusters with lower mismatch values than their surrounding blocks. The distribution of mismatch hot- and coldspots was then compared to the spatial distribution of socio-demographic groups. Results reveal distributional environmental injustice of access to the climate-regulating benefits of ecosystem services provided by urban green infrastructure in NYC. Analyses show that areas with lower supply-demand mismatch tend to be populated by a larger proportion of white residents with higher median incomes, and areas with high mismatch values have lower incomes and a higher proportion of people of color. We suggest that urban policy and planning should ensure that investments in "nature-based" solutions such as through urban green infrastructure for climate change adaptation do not reinforce or exacerbate potentially existing environmental injustices.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Distributional environmental justice of residential walking space: The lens of urban ecosystem services supply and demand
    Fang, Xuening
    Ma, Qun
    Wu, Liwen
    Liu, Xin
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2023, 329
  • [2] Mapping ecosystem services: The supply and demand of flood regulation services in Europe
    Sturck, Julia
    Poortinga, Ate
    Verburg, Peter H.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2014, 38 : 198 - 211
  • [3] Environmental Justice and Gentrification in New York City
    Checker, Melissa
    ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 63 (02): : 16 - 27
  • [4] National scale mapping of supply and demand for recreational ecosystem services
    Hooftman, Danny A. P.
    Ridding, Lucy E.
    Redhead, John W.
    Willcock, Simon
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2023, 154
  • [5] Analyzing urban environmental justice based on supply, demand, and access to cooling ecosystem services in Tehran, Iran
    Ghorbani, Sareh
    Salehi, Esmail
    Faryadi, Shahrzad
    Jafari, Hamid Reza
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT, 2022, 65 (02) : 288 - 310
  • [6] Organizing urban ecosystem services through environmental stewardship governance in New York City
    Connolly, James J.
    Svendsen, Erika S.
    Fisher, Dana R.
    Campbell, Lindsay K.
    LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2013, 109 (01) : 76 - 84
  • [7] Quantifying and mapping ecosystem services: Demand and supply of pollination in the European Union
    Schulp, C. J. E.
    Lautenbach, S.
    Verburg, P. H.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2014, 36 : 131 - 141
  • [8] New York City Environmental Justice Alliance Waterfront Justice Project
    Bautista, Eddie
    Hanhardt, Eva
    Osorio, Juan Camilo
    Dwyer, Natasha
    LOCAL ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 20 (06) : 664 - 682
  • [9] Networked governance and the management of ecosystem services: The case of urban environmental stewardship in New York City
    Connolly, James J. T.
    Svendsen, Erika S.
    Fisher, Dana R.
    Campbell, Lindsay K.
    ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, 2014, 10 : 187 - 194
  • [10] Mapping the city-scale supply and demand of ecosystem flood regulation services-A case study in Shanghai
    Shen, Ju
    Du, Shiqiang
    Huang, Qingxu
    Yin, Jie
    Zhang, Min
    Wen, Jiahong
    Gao, Jun
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2019, 106