Abstract

The water–energy–food (WEF) nexus has emerged as a leading tool for assessing integrated resource management strategies and for monitoring progress towards the WEF-related Sustainable Development Goals. A notable outcome of WEF nexus research has been the calculation of the global WEF Nexus Index, which provides a quantitative ranking of country-level WEF security for 170 nations. As valuable as this ranking is, the aggregation of country-level WEF data obscures regional differences, particularly in remote regions that are sparsely populated and differ in geography, economy, and climate. This has proven to be the case for northern Canada, which despite representing 40% of Canada’s total land area, accounts for less than 1% of the Canadian population, most of whom are Indigenous. Whereas Canada ranks 5th globally in their WEF security, northern Canada, if treated independently, would rank 67th on the global WEF Nexus Index rankings. Evaluating each WEF sector independently, northern Canada would rank 22nd in water security, 90th in energy security, and 113th in food security. Our results further reveal that considerable inter-regional variability exists between northern territories and provinces, where Nunavik would rank 54th, Northwest Territories 67th, Yukon 69th, Labrador 80th, and Nunavut 107th on the global index. By highlighting these differences, we hope that this research can aid decision-makers in developing informed, regionally specific, and integrative resource policy responses that remedy rather than amplify existing WEF-related inequalities.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, the water–energy–food (WEF) nexus has emerged as a leading tool for assessing integrated resource management strategies and for monitoring progress towards the WEF-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs 2, 6, and 7)

  • WEF Nexus Index ranking places it in the company of Thailand and Belarus in the world rankings of WEF security

  • WEF nexus-based research has highlighted the importance of treating WEF sectors as a multi-centric, interconnected system in order to achieve more efficient resource planning outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

The water–energy–food (WEF) nexus has emerged as a leading tool for assessing integrated resource management strategies and for monitoring progress towards the WEF-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs 2, 6, and 7). WEF security based on 21 water, energy, and food security indicators. Among the 21 indicators that were selected, 7 are used to measure water security, 6 represent energy security, and 8 are used to assess food security (Table 1). The analytical framework for the WEF Nexus Index consists of three weighted sub-indexes, or “pillars”, each one representing a WEF sector. The equal weighting of each pillar reflects the multicentric nature of the WEF nexus by ensuring that each resource sector has equal importance in the calculation of the overall index [10]. Within each WEF pillar are two weighted sub-pillars representing access and availability. Each sub-pillar contains a subset of indicators representing access to or availability of its corresponding

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