Conceptual representation of the direct and indirect displacement effects of urban expansion on urban, cultivated and natural lands. C, cultivated lands; N, natural lands; U, urban lands. Red indicates expansion of urban area, orange indicates displacement of cultivated area. Credit: Nature Sustainability (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41893-024-01362-2

Urbanization in Africa is accelerating quickly, showing no signs of slowing down. An international team of researchers addresses critical gaps in our understanding of how this urbanization affects local food and ecological systems, emphasizing the importance of recognizing shifts in dietary patterns.

Since the early 2000s, Africa's urban population has more than doubled, reaching more than 600 million in 2020. If current growth continues, the urban population is expected to double again by 2050. In Africa, the annual rate of urban area expansion has surpassed the rate of urban population growth.

Globally, future urban area expansion is expected to cause significant food production losses, reduce biodiversity, and increase land-use change emissions, jeopardizing human livelihoods and the natural environment.

Typically, recent research on the environmental impact of urban expansion treats it as the conversion of various land covers to , focusing only on the direct effects. In a new study, published in Nature Sustainability, IIASA researchers and their colleagues demonstrate the complexity of expected urbanization and its multiple environmental impacts.

"As Africa is urbanizing the fastest, its food system is also transforming rapidly. This puts a lot of pressure on in what is already the most food-insecure region in the world," notes Koen De Vos, study author and a guest research assistant in the Integrated Biospheres Futures Research Group of the IIASA Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program.

"In our study, we consider both direct land-use changes and indirect effects, such as agricultural displacement and dietary shifts associated with urbanization, particularly concerning rice consumption."

The researchers developed a method to integrate all of this information using the GLOBIOM model, creating an elaborate, complex, and multidimensional study that is unprecedented in its scope. Results show that, contrary to common belief, urban area expansion has a limited impact on food production losses, as agricultural land simply expands elsewhere.

At the same time, the impact on natural lands is more significant, as it encompasses not only the direct effects of urban area expansion but also the subsequent displacement of agricultural land.

The most important environmental spillover effects arise from dietary changes, particularly rice consumption. As people eat more rice in African cities, more rice needs to be produced, resulting in greater reliance on imports and local production. Consequently, this leads to an increase in methane emissions, additional loss of natural lands, changes in water usage, and biodiversity loss.

"This result adds to the growing evidence that our diets will be one of the major drivers of planetary health," explains Marta Kozicka, a study co-author and IIASA researcher in the Integrated Biospheres Futures Research Group.

In their study, the research team highlights that policymakers should adopt holistic approaches in the decision-making process. Integrating indirect land-use effects and dietary shifts into land-use planning and policymaking is essential to tackle future sustainability challenges.

More information: Koen De Vos et al, African food system and biodiversity mainly affected by urbanization via dietary shifts, Nature Sustainability (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41893-024-01362-2

Journal information: Nature Sustainability