Abstract

AbstractReliance on fossil fuels is causing unprecedented climate change and is accelerating environmental degradation and global biodiversity loss. Together, climate change and biodiversity loss, if not averted urgently, may inflict severe damage on ecosystem processes, functions and services that support the welfare of modern societies. Increasing renewable energy deployment and expanding the current protected area network represent key solutions to these challenges, but conflicts may arise over the use of limited land for energy production as opposed to biodiversity conservation. Here, we compare recently identified core areas for the expansion of the global protected area network with the renewable energy potential available from land‐based solar photovoltaic, wind energy and bioenergy (in the form of Miscanthus × giganteus). We show that these energy sources have very different biodiversity impacts and net energy contributions. The extent of risks and opportunities deriving from renewable energy development is highly dependent on the type of renewable source harvested, the restrictions imposed on energy harvest and the region considered, with Central America appearing at particularly high potential risk from renewable energy expansion. Without restrictions on power generation due to factors such as production and transport costs, we show that bioenergy production is a major potential threat to biodiversity, while the potential impact of wind and solar appears smaller than that of bioenergy. However, these differences become reduced when energy potential is restricted by external factors including local energy demand. Overall, we found that areas of opportunity for developing solar and wind energy with little harm to biodiversity could exist in several regions of the world, with the magnitude of potential impact being particularly dependent on restrictions imposed by local energy demand. The evidence provided here helps guide sustainable development of renewable energy and contributes to the targeting of global efforts in climate mitigation and biodiversity conservation.

Highlights

  • The world is facing two environmental challenges of massive scale, global climate disruption (IPCC, 2013) and the biodiversity collapse (Dirzo et al, 2014; Pimm et al, 2014)

  • Given their scope for low greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions per unit of energy (IPCC, 2011), RE sources represent a promising solution for jointly mitigating global climate change (IPCC, 2011; REN21, 2014) while potentially alleviating forthcoming direct and indirect pressures on biodiversity derived from fossil fuel extraction and combustion (IPCC, 2011; Butt et al, 2013)

  • The potential conflict arising from overlap between biodiversity conservation and energy production appears lower for wind energy and solar PV than for bioenergy, with only one-third of their respective global potential located within the top biodiversity areas (Figs 1 and 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The world is facing two environmental challenges of massive scale, global climate disruption (IPCC, 2013) and the biodiversity collapse (Dirzo et al, 2014; Pimm et al, 2014). In the light of the growing body of evidence highlighting the consequences of anthropogenic climate disruption (IPCC, 2013), the global energy sector is undergoing a slow but progressive transition, shifting from fossil fuel to renewable energy [hereafter RE] sources (REN21, 2014). Given their scope for low greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions per unit of energy (IPCC, 2011), RE sources represent a promising solution for jointly mitigating global climate change (IPCC, 2011; REN21, 2014) while potentially alleviating forthcoming direct and indirect pressures on biodiversity derived from fossil fuel extraction and combustion (IPCC, 2011; Butt et al, 2013). As this trend is projected to continue, vast regions may become affected by RE development (IPCC, 2011; REN21, 2014)

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