Abstract

Nature-based solutions (NbS) have been positioned and implemented in urban areas as solutions for enhancing urban resilience in the face of a wide range of urban challenges. However, there is a lack of recommendations of optimal NbS and appropriate typologies fitting to different contexts and urban design. The analytical frameworks for NbS implementation and impact evaluation, that integrate NbS into local policy frameworks, socio-economic transition pathways, and spatial planning, remain fragmented. In this article, the NbS concept and its related terminologies are first discussed. Second, the types of NbS implemented in Europe are reviewed and their benefits over time are explored, prior to categorizing them and highlighting the key methods, criteria, and indicators to identify and assess the NbS’s impacts, co-benefits, and trade-offs. The latter involved a review of the websites of 52 projects and some relevant publications funded by EU Research and Innovation programs and other relevant publications. The results show that there is a shared understanding that the NbS concept encompasses benefits of restoration and rehabilitation of ecosystems, carbon neutrality, improved environmental quality, health and well-being, and evidence for such benefits. This study also shows that most NbS-related projects and activities in Europe use hybrid approaches, with NbS typically developed, tested, or implemented to target specific types of environmental–social–economic challenges. The results of this study indicate that NbS as a holistic concept would be beneficial in the context of climate action and sustainable solutions to enhance ecosystem resilience and adaptive capacity within cities. As such, this article provides a snapshot of the role of NbS in urban sustainability development, a guide to the state-of-the-art, and key messages and recommendations of this rapidly emerging and evolving field.

Highlights

  • Climate change and urbanization have resulted in a broad range of societal challenges for urban areas [1], such as the loss or degradation of natural areas, soil sealing, drought, and flooding, which pose further challenges to biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, delivery of the ecosystem services (ES), and human health and well-being [2]

  • The objective of this temporal analysis is to analyze the frequency of occurrence for Nature-based solutions (NbS) and their related concepts found in the literature, and it was not necessary to review the papers in detail

  • Through European Commission (EC)’s Community Research and Development Information Service (CORDIS) [71], with the keywords ‘Nature-based solutions’, we found out that until 18 May 2021, 52 projects with a total budget of 435 million EUR have been funded by the EU Research and Innovation (R&I) program since 2011 (Appendix A, Table A1)

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change and urbanization have resulted in a broad range of societal challenges for urban areas [1], such as the loss or degradation of natural areas, soil sealing, drought, and flooding, which pose further challenges to biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, delivery of the ecosystem services (ES) (e.g., clean air, water, and soil), and human health and well-being [2]. 24) as “NbS are inspired and supported by nature and simultaneously provide environmental, social, cultural and economic benefits”, and revised its definition in the year 2019 [34] as “NbS are inspired and supported by nature, which are cost-effective, simultaneously provide environmental, social and economic benefits and help build resilience Such solutions bring more, and more diverse, nature and natural features and processes into cities, landscapes and seascapes, through locally adapted, resource-efficient and systemic interventions”. We find that the IUCN’s NbS definition and the EC’s NbS definition are worded differently, but cover similar aspects, both defining NbS as living solutions or actions that utilize nature to deliver multiple benefits and address multiple challenges in a broad way

Nature-Based Solutions-Related Concepts
Google Trends Analysis for Nature-Based Solutions and Their Related Concepts
Nature-Based Solutions within EU Research and Innovation Agenda
Nature-Based Solutions within Chinese Governmental Framework
Nature-Based Solutions Data and Metadata
Discussion
Findings
Need for Sustainable Design of Nature-Based Solutions
Conclusions
Full Text
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