Many of these triple-win nexus solutions relate to how we grow and prepare food and conserve ecosystems. For example, clean cooking technologies can improve household air quality for the 2.1 billion people who still rely on cooking with highly polluting wood, charcoal, and dung. Poor air quality can lead to chronic illness and is a leading cause of premature deaths. Switching to cleaner fuels also frees up time spent gathering fuelwood, allowing more time for education and paid work.
But the benefits go well beyond improved air quality and more time. It also reduces tree harvesting, which degrades forests and increases greenhouse gas emissions. Moreover, in a study across 35 countries, researchers observed a lower probability of diarrheal disease, a leading cause of childhood mortality, in people who lived downstream of healthy forests. This means that one solution – improving access to clean cooking – deployed in the right location can help mitigate climate change, improve air quality, increase education, raise incomes, protect forests, and decrease childhood mortality. Many other solutions also provide multiple benefits for climate, nature, and people.
More and more organizations and researchers are appreciating the benefits and tradeoffs between climate, nature, and people. Over the last 30 years, the number of studies on the so-called “co-benefits” of natural climate solutions has increased tenfold. At Project Drawdown, however, we have come to realize that there are no “co-benefits,” only benefits, and the most powerful solutions are those at the nexus, where investing resources and research results in improved outcomes well beyond what addressing climate, nature, or human well-being alone could achieve. In the coming year and beyond, we will be developing new tools and approaches to accelerate the world's understanding and adoption of these nexus solutions.
Paul West, Ph.D., is an ecologist developing science-based solutions for sustaining a healthy planet for people and nature. As the Drawdown Nexus lead, Paul is assessing how climate solutions can create win-wins and trade-offs for conserving biodiversity, creating a sustainable food system, and many other aspects of planetary health and human well-being.
Yusuf Jameel, Ph.D., is a scientist at Project Drawdown with expertise in water resources, public health, data analytics, science communication, and the co-benefits of climate action.
Dan Jasper is a policy advisor at Project Drawdown with a multidisciplinary background in public policy at the intersection of climate change and poverty alleviation.
This work was published under a Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. You are welcome to republish it following the license terms.