Abstract

While ecosystem service (ES) assessments become a more and more important source of knowledge, there is a need for synthesis approaches that make the results usable to support decisions. Effective synthesis approaches can reduce the information burden produced by multiple ES assessments and help decision-makers to compare alternative options and to assess their impacts. In this review, we focus on urban planning, one of the main decision-making processes that affect ES in cities, and investigate what synthesis approaches have been applied to support planning decisions. The aim is to identify the options available and to analyze their suitability to different urban planning decisions, thus providing a guidance to potential users.We reviewed 62 studies selected through a search in two literature databases and identified six recurring synthesis approaches: diversity, average, weighted summation, multi-criteria analysis, optimization algorithms, and efficiency indicators; and a limited number of methods developed ad-hoc for specific applications. For each approach, we collected evidence about the appropriateness for different decision-making contexts, the applicability to different ES categories and types of assessment methods, and the occurrence of complementary analyses of ES interactions. Further, we built on the reviewed publications to identify pros and cons, including critical aspects related to the usability of the approaches, such as their complexity, transparency, and the level of stakeholder involvement. Based on the findings, we draw recommendations on how to select suitable synthesis approaches to support different urban planning decisions.

Highlights

  • Ecosystem service (ES) assessments are increasingly promoted as an important source of knowledge to support decision-making in a wide range of policy contexts (Bennett & Chaplin-Kramer, 2016; European Commission, 2019; Mandle et al, 2020)

  • The objective of this article is to conduct a review of approaches to synthesize multiple ecosystem service (ES) assessments that have been applied to urban planning decisions, and provide recommendations for their selection and use

  • By clustering the synthesis methods and indicators adopted in the reviewed literature, we identified six main approaches used to synthe­ size information from multiple ES assessments

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Summary

Introduction

Ecosystem service (ES) assessments are increasingly promoted as an important source of knowledge to support decision-making in a wide range of policy contexts (Bennett & Chaplin-Kramer, 2016; European Commission, 2019; Mandle et al, 2020). At the level of detailed development planning, the arrangement of green components and the design of nature-based so­ lutions in a specific area affect the local provision of many ES, such as stormwater management and microclimate regulation (Haghighatafshar et al, 2019; Norton et al, 2015) At all these decision-making levels, an evidence-based approach to urban planning requires assessing multiple ES, and synthesizing the results in a way that reduces complexity (Inostroza, Konig, Pickard, & Zhen, 2017) and allows comparing alternative options and monitoring the effects of their implementation (Frantzeskaki et al, 2020; Salata, Giaimo, Barbieri, & Garnero, 2020)

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