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Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis

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Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis. / Walsh, Lael; Mead, Bethan R.; Hardman, Charlotte A. et al.
In: Environmental Research Letters, Vol. 17, No. 1, 014052, 14.01.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Walsh, L, Mead, BR, Hardman, CA, Evans, D, Liu, L, Falagán, N, Kourmpetli, S & Davies, J 2022, 'Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 17, no. 1, 014052. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730

APA

Walsh, L., Mead, B. R., Hardman, C. A., Evans, D., Liu, L., Falagán, N., Kourmpetli, S., & Davies, J. (2022). Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis. Environmental Research Letters, 17(1), Article 014052. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730

Vancouver

Walsh L, Mead BR, Hardman CA, Evans D, Liu L, Falagán N et al. Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis. Environmental Research Letters. 2022 Jan 14;17(1):014052. doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730

Author

Walsh, Lael ; Mead, Bethan R. ; Hardman, Charlotte A. et al. / Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production : a national scale analysis. In: Environmental Research Letters. 2022 ; Vol. 17, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{689f067d4f084eed9e0ed977603700b5,
title = "Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production: a national scale analysis",
abstract = "As urban areas and land-use constraints grow, there is increasing interest in utilizing urban spaces for food production. Several studies have uncovered significant potential for urban growing to supplement production of fruit and vegetables, focusing on one or two cities as case studies, whilst others have assessed the global scale potential. Here, we provide a national-scale analysis of the horticultural production potential of urban green spaces, which is a relevant scale for agri-food and urban development policy making using Great Britain (GB) as a case study. Urban green spaces available for horticultural production across GB are identified and potential yields quantified based on three production options. The distribution of urban green spaces within 26 urban towns and cities across GB are then examined to understand the productive potential compared to their total extent and populations. Urban green spaces in GB, at their upper limit, have the capacity to support production that is 8× greater than current domestic production of fruit and vegetables. This amounts to 38% of current domestic production and imports combined, or >400% if exotic fruits and vegetables less suited to GB growing conditions are excluded. Most urban green spaces nationally are found to fall within a small number of categories, with private residential gardens and amenity spaces making up the majority of space. By examining towns and cities across GB in further detail, we find that the area of green space does not vary greatly between urban conurbations of different sizes, and all are found to have substantial potential to meet the dietary needs of the local urban population. This study highlights that national policies can be suitably developed to support urban agriculture and that making use of urban green spaces for food production could help to enhance the resilience of the national-scale food system to shocks in import pathways, or disruptions to domestic production and distribution.",
author = "Lael Walsh and Mead, {Bethan R.} and Hardman, {Charlotte A.} and Daniel Evans and Lingxuan Liu and Natalia Falag{\'a}n and Sofia Kourmpetli and Jessica Davies",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Environmental Research Letters",
issn = "1748-9326",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Potential of urban green spaces for supporting horticultural production

T2 - a national scale analysis

AU - Walsh, Lael

AU - Mead, Bethan R.

AU - Hardman, Charlotte A.

AU - Evans, Daniel

AU - Liu, Lingxuan

AU - Falagán, Natalia

AU - Kourmpetli, Sofia

AU - Davies, Jessica

PY - 2022/1/14

Y1 - 2022/1/14

N2 - As urban areas and land-use constraints grow, there is increasing interest in utilizing urban spaces for food production. Several studies have uncovered significant potential for urban growing to supplement production of fruit and vegetables, focusing on one or two cities as case studies, whilst others have assessed the global scale potential. Here, we provide a national-scale analysis of the horticultural production potential of urban green spaces, which is a relevant scale for agri-food and urban development policy making using Great Britain (GB) as a case study. Urban green spaces available for horticultural production across GB are identified and potential yields quantified based on three production options. The distribution of urban green spaces within 26 urban towns and cities across GB are then examined to understand the productive potential compared to their total extent and populations. Urban green spaces in GB, at their upper limit, have the capacity to support production that is 8× greater than current domestic production of fruit and vegetables. This amounts to 38% of current domestic production and imports combined, or >400% if exotic fruits and vegetables less suited to GB growing conditions are excluded. Most urban green spaces nationally are found to fall within a small number of categories, with private residential gardens and amenity spaces making up the majority of space. By examining towns and cities across GB in further detail, we find that the area of green space does not vary greatly between urban conurbations of different sizes, and all are found to have substantial potential to meet the dietary needs of the local urban population. This study highlights that national policies can be suitably developed to support urban agriculture and that making use of urban green spaces for food production could help to enhance the resilience of the national-scale food system to shocks in import pathways, or disruptions to domestic production and distribution.

AB - As urban areas and land-use constraints grow, there is increasing interest in utilizing urban spaces for food production. Several studies have uncovered significant potential for urban growing to supplement production of fruit and vegetables, focusing on one or two cities as case studies, whilst others have assessed the global scale potential. Here, we provide a national-scale analysis of the horticultural production potential of urban green spaces, which is a relevant scale for agri-food and urban development policy making using Great Britain (GB) as a case study. Urban green spaces available for horticultural production across GB are identified and potential yields quantified based on three production options. The distribution of urban green spaces within 26 urban towns and cities across GB are then examined to understand the productive potential compared to their total extent and populations. Urban green spaces in GB, at their upper limit, have the capacity to support production that is 8× greater than current domestic production of fruit and vegetables. This amounts to 38% of current domestic production and imports combined, or >400% if exotic fruits and vegetables less suited to GB growing conditions are excluded. Most urban green spaces nationally are found to fall within a small number of categories, with private residential gardens and amenity spaces making up the majority of space. By examining towns and cities across GB in further detail, we find that the area of green space does not vary greatly between urban conurbations of different sizes, and all are found to have substantial potential to meet the dietary needs of the local urban population. This study highlights that national policies can be suitably developed to support urban agriculture and that making use of urban green spaces for food production could help to enhance the resilience of the national-scale food system to shocks in import pathways, or disruptions to domestic production and distribution.

U2 - 10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730

DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/ac4730

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

JO - Environmental Research Letters

JF - Environmental Research Letters

SN - 1748-9326

IS - 1

M1 - 014052

ER -