Spatiotemporal land use modelling to assess land availability for energy crops – illustrated for Mozambique
Publication date
2012-11
Authors
Hilst, F. van der
Verstegen, J.A.
Karssenberg, D.J.
Faaij, A.P.C.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
A method and tool have been developed to assess future developments in land availability for bioenergy crops
in a spatially explicit way, while taking into account both the developments in other land use functions, such as
land for food, livestock and material production, and the uncertainties in the key determinant factors of land
use change (LUC). This spatiotemporal LUC model is demonstrated with a case study on the developments in
the land availability for bioenergy crops in Mozambique in the timeframe 2005–2030. The developments in the
main drivers for agricultural land use, demand for food, animal products and materials were assessed, based on
the projected developments in population, diet, GDP and self-sufficiency ratio. Two scenarios were developed: a
business-as-usual (BAU) scenario and a progressive scenario. Land allocation was based on land use class-specific
sets of suitability factors. The LUC dynamics were mapped on a 1 km2 grid level for each individual year
up to 2030. In the BAU scenario, 7.7 Mha and in the progressive scenario 16.4 Mha could become available for
bioenergy crop production in 2030. Based on the Monte Carlo analysis, a 95% confidence interval of the amount
of land available and the spatially explicit probability of available land was found. The bottom-up approach, the
number of dynamic land uses, the diverse portfolio of LUC drivers and suitability factors, and the possibility to
model uncertainty mean that this model is a step forward in modelling land availability for bioenergy potentials.
Keywords
bioenergy potentials, land use change, GIS, model, Mozambique, spatiotemporal uncertainty modelling