Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area

Urban sprawl impacts are critical in the evaluation of planning decisions and often monitored by indicators of soil sealing. In France, these indicators are required by law to be reported in environmental assessments of planning documents. Although monitoring of soil sealing is important to limit en...

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Main Authors: Tardieu, Lea, Hamel, Perrine, Viguié, Vincent, Coste, Lana, Levrel, Harold
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153557
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1535572021-12-11T20:11:17Z Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area Tardieu, Lea Hamel, Perrine Viguié, Vincent Coste, Lana Levrel, Harold Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Engineering::Environmental engineering Ecosystem Services Stakeholders Urban sprawl impacts are critical in the evaluation of planning decisions and often monitored by indicators of soil sealing. In France, these indicators are required by law to be reported in environmental assessments of planning documents. Although monitoring of soil sealing is important to limit environmental impacts, focusing on this sole dimension in urban planning can be reductive. In this paper, we explore to what extent ecosystem services (ES) indicators, measuring the benefits to humans provided by healthy ecosystems, are captured by soil sealing indicators by comparing their temporal and spatial evolutions. Through consulting with urban planning stakeholders, we model and map the spatial and temporal evolutions over a 35 year period of soil sealing and eight priority ES in the Paris metropolitan area (agricultural potential, groundwater recharge, global climate regulation, water quality regulation through nutrient retention, urban heat mitigation, flood mitigation, recreational potential and natural heritage). We highlight the spatial and temporal matches and mismatches between the two types of indicators (ES and soil sealing) and demonstrate that a large part of ES variations are not well captured by soil sealing indicators in time and space (spatial match with the eight ES is only found for 10% of the Paris metropolitan area). This calls for finer, ES-based, diagnosis in land use planning that could usefully illuminate the gains and losses related to land use and land management policies by taking into account the environmental and societal impacts of urban sprawl. National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This study is part of the IDEFESE project (https:/ /idefese.wordpress.com/) funded by ADEME, the French Ministry for an Ecological Transition (CGDD and PUCA), and AgroParisTech. We wish to thank the Institut Paris Region for providing important data necessary for the success of the study. We would like to thank all the stakeholders involved in the IDEFESE project, the EFESE scientific board and stakeholders’ committee for their involvement in the project and their constructive feedbacks. PH acknowledges additional funding from the National Research Foundation, Prime Minister’s Office, Singapore under award NRF-NRFF12-2020-0009. We finally thank three anonymous referees and the editors for their constructive comments and suggestions that led to significant improvements in the manuscript. 2021-12-08T07:57:30Z 2021-12-08T07:57:30Z 2021 Journal Article Tardieu, L., Hamel, P., Viguié, V., Coste, L. & Levrel, H. (2021). Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area. Environmental Research Letters, 16(10), 104019-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac24d0 1748-9326 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153557 10.1088/1748-9326/ac24d0 2-s2.0-85116466531 10 16 104019 en NRF-NRFF12-2020-0009 Environmental Research Letters Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Ecosystem Services
Stakeholders
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Ecosystem Services
Stakeholders
Tardieu, Lea
Hamel, Perrine
Viguié, Vincent
Coste, Lana
Levrel, Harold
Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
description Urban sprawl impacts are critical in the evaluation of planning decisions and often monitored by indicators of soil sealing. In France, these indicators are required by law to be reported in environmental assessments of planning documents. Although monitoring of soil sealing is important to limit environmental impacts, focusing on this sole dimension in urban planning can be reductive. In this paper, we explore to what extent ecosystem services (ES) indicators, measuring the benefits to humans provided by healthy ecosystems, are captured by soil sealing indicators by comparing their temporal and spatial evolutions. Through consulting with urban planning stakeholders, we model and map the spatial and temporal evolutions over a 35 year period of soil sealing and eight priority ES in the Paris metropolitan area (agricultural potential, groundwater recharge, global climate regulation, water quality regulation through nutrient retention, urban heat mitigation, flood mitigation, recreational potential and natural heritage). We highlight the spatial and temporal matches and mismatches between the two types of indicators (ES and soil sealing) and demonstrate that a large part of ES variations are not well captured by soil sealing indicators in time and space (spatial match with the eight ES is only found for 10% of the Paris metropolitan area). This calls for finer, ES-based, diagnosis in land use planning that could usefully illuminate the gains and losses related to land use and land management policies by taking into account the environmental and societal impacts of urban sprawl.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Tardieu, Lea
Hamel, Perrine
Viguié, Vincent
Coste, Lana
Levrel, Harold
format Article
author Tardieu, Lea
Hamel, Perrine
Viguié, Vincent
Coste, Lana
Levrel, Harold
author_sort Tardieu, Lea
title Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
title_short Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
title_full Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
title_fullStr Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
title_full_unstemmed Are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : Insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the Paris metropolitan area
title_sort are soil sealing indicators sufficient to guide urban planning? : insights from an ecosystem services assessment in the paris metropolitan area
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153557
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