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Stakeholders, Interests and Power as Drivers of Community Forestry: Comparative Analysis of Albania, Germany, Cameroon, Indonesia, Namibia, Nepal and Thailand

Community forestry has not met the great public expectations on a significant contribution to sustainable forestry yet. Recent research in the management and policy of community forestry describes a complex process of multi level social choice which determines the outcomes. Our hypothesis is that the key factors determining the outcomes of community forestry are the interests and power of the external stake holders. This hypothesis will be tested in a comparative quantitative and qualitative analysis. In seven countries comprising developed and developing countries 84 cases will be used for comparison. The comparative analysis will be carried out by one PhD student financed by the project. He will do the field work in close cooperation with PhD students who are already conducting their PhD analysis the different countries. The comparative analysis is aimed to explore key drivers of community forestry which are not yet identified in literature.

Carbon and Chorine Isotope Effect Study to Investigate Chlorinated Ethylene Dehalogenation Mechanisms

Chlorinated ethylenes are prevalent groundwater contaminants. Numerous studies have addressed the mechanism of their reductive dehalogenation during biodegradation and reaction with zero-valent iron. However, despite insight with purified enzymes and well-characterized chemical model systems, conclusive evidence has been missing that the same mechanisms do indeed prevail in real-world transformations. While dual kinetic isotope effect measurements can provide such lines of evidence, until now this approach has not been possible for chlorinated ethylenes because an adequate method for continuous flow compound specific chlorine isotope analysis has been missing. This study attempts to close this prevalent research gap by a combination of two complementary approaches. (1) A novel analytical method to measure isotope effects for carbon and chlorine. (2) A carefully chosen set of well-defined model reactants representing distinct dehalogenation mechanisms believed to be important in real-world systems. Isotope trends observed in biotic and abiotic environmental dehalogenation will be compared to these model reactions, and the respective mechanistic hypotheses will be confirmed or discarded. With this hypothesis-driven approach it is our goal to elucidate for the first timdehalogenation reactions.

Uncertainty and the bioeconomics of near-natural silviculture

Research in 'silviculture' and 'forest economics' very often takes place largely independent from each other. While silviculture predominantly focuses on ecological aspects, forest eco-nomics is sometimes very theoretic. The applied bioeconomic models often lack biological realism. Investigating mixed forests this proposal tries to improve bioeconomic modelling and optimisation under uncertainty. The hypothesis is tested whether or not bioeconomic model-ling of interacting tree species and risk integration would implicitly lead to close-to-nature forestry. In a first part, economic consequences of interdependent tree species mixed at the stand level are modelled. This part is based on published literature, an improved model of timber quality and existing data on salvage harvests. A model of survival over age is then to be developed for mixed stands. A second section then builds upon data generated in part one and concentrates on the simultaneous optimisation of species proportions and harvest-ing ages. It starts with a mean-variance optimisation as a reference solution. The obtained results are compared with data from alternative approaches as stochastic dominance, down-side risk and information-gap robustness.

The Water, Energy and Food Security Nexus

In order to understand the interlinked problems in the Nexus (Latin = connection, linkage, interrelation) of water, energy and food security, close cooperation between scientists and practitioners from different fields is necessary. The present and future challenge of a reliable supply with water, energy and food is an example, where isolated considerations do not lead to viable solutions. Sustainable action and meaningful research in these highly interconnected fields require a holistic and comprehensive perspective and a new approach. In this sense, a collaborative research structure with a holistic view on the Nexus of Water, Energy and Food security was established in 2013 at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences. The project bundles some of the research efforts of 11 professors from different faculties and institutes. The researchers jointly work on initiating new cooperation projects with partners from industry, academia and civil society. Together they aim at exploring new technologies and applying new approaches to solve major issues of efficiency and sustainability in resource use.

Rehabilitation of Degraded Forests in Yunnan (German-Chinese Cooperation for Agrarian Research)

Background: An increasing frequency of massive flooding along the lower Yangtse River in China ended in a disastrous catastrophe in summer 1998 leaving several thousand people homeless, more than 3.600 dead and causing enormous economic damage. Inappropriate land-use techniques and large scale timber felling in the water catchment of the upper Yangtse and its feeder streams were stated to be the main causes. Immediate timber cutting bans were imposed and investigations on land use patterns were initiated by the Chinese Government. The Institute for World Forestry of the Federal Research Centre for Forestry and Forest Products was approached by the Yunnan Academy of Forestry in Kunming to exchange experiences and to cooperate scientifically in the design and application of appropriate afforestation and silvicultural management techniques in the water catchment area of the Yangtse. This cooperation was initiated in 1999 and is based on formal agreements in the fields of agrarian research between the German and Chinese Governments. Objectives: The cooperation was in the first step focussing on the identification of factors which caused the enormous floodings. After their identification measures of prevention were determined and put into practice. In this context experiences made in past centuries in the alpine region of central Europe served as an incentive and example for similar environmental problems and solutions under comparable conditions. Relevant key questions of the cooperation project were: - Analysis of forest related factors influencing the recent floodings of the Yangtse, - Analysis and evaluation of silvicultural management experiences from central Europe for know-how transfer, - Evaluation of rehabilitation measures for successful application in Yunnan, - Dissemination of knowledge through vocational training. Results: - Frequent wild grazing of husbandry is a key factor for forest degeneration beyond unsustainable timber harvests, forest fires and insect calamities leading to increased water run-off in the mountainous region of Yunnan; - Browsing of cattle interrupts succession thus avoiding natural regeneration and leaving a logging ban ineffective; - Mountain pasture in the Alps had similar effects in the past in central Europe. The introduction of controlled grazing has led to an ecologically compatible coexistence of pasture and ecology. Close-to-nature forestry can have positive effects in this sensitive environment. - Afforestation with site adopted broadleaves and coniferous tree species was implemented on demonstration level using advanced techniques in Yunnan.

Late pleistocene and holocene climate variability and environmental changes in high mountain ranges: document from the closed hala hu (har lake), northern tibetan plateau

Regionalplanung Sachsen - Verkehr

Es sind regionalplanerische Festlegungen des Komplexes Raumnutzung - Verkehr dargestellt. Dieser Dienst enthält Daten der Planungsregionen Region Chemnitz, Oberes Elbtal/Osterzgebirge und Oberlausitz-Niederschlesien und deckt im Endausbau den gesamten Freistaat Sachsen ab. Entsprechend des Landesentwicklungsplanes 2013 als fachübergreifendes Gesamtkonzept zur räumlichen Entwicklung, Ordnung und Sicherung des Freistaates Sachsen stellen die Regionalpläne einen verbindlichen Rahmen für die räumliche Entwicklung, Ordnung und Sicherung des Raumes dar. Die rechtsverbindlichen Pläne werden in der Regel im Maßstab 1:100.000 erstellt.

Standorte Energieerzeugende Anlagen Strom und Wärme NRW (Erneuerbare und konventionelle Energien)

Das Landesamt für Natur, Umwelt und Klima Nordrhein-Westfalen (LANUK) stellt im Energieatlas NRW (www.energieatlas.nrw.de) die Standorte der Erneuerbaren Energien, der fossilen Kraftwerke und der Elektrotankstellen in NRW dar. Folgende Energieträger werden dargestellt: Biomasse/Bioenergie, Deponiegas, Grubengas, Klärgas, Photovoltaik Freifläche, Wasserkraft, Windenergie, Windenergieanlagen in Planung, stillgelegte Windenergieanlagen, E-Tankstellen, Braunkohle, Steinkohle, Erdgas, Mineralöl, Müllverbrennungsanlagen, Grubenwasser, Industrielle Abwärme und KWK-relevante Industriestandorte. Die Excel-Tabelle fasst die Standorte aller Energieträger zusammen

Strömungsdynamik über ästuarinen Bodenformen

Ziel dieses Projektes ist die Beschreibung von Strömungsmustern über ästuarinen Bodenformen anhand von Rinnenexperimenten und numerischen Simulationen. Bodenformen (Riffel und Dünen) sind weitverbreitete Bestandteile von Flüssen, Ästuaren, Küstengewässern- und Tiefseegebieten. Bodenformen liefern Hinweise auf Richtung und Stärke von Sedimenttransportprozessen, haben einen starken Einfluss auf die über ihnen liegende Strömung und sind zudem von großer sozioökonomischer Bedeutung, z. B. hinsichtlich ihrer Auswirkungen auf die Schiffbarkeit der Gewässer. In vielen Ästuaren bilden sich aufgrund der starken Hydrodynamik und der hohen Verfügbarkeit von sandigen Sedimenten große Bodenformfelder. Die Strömung über diesen Bodenformfeldern unterscheidet sich grundlegend von der Strömung über den bekannten, dreieckigen Bodenformen mit einem Neigungswinkel von 30°, die bisher im Fokus von Labor- und numerischen Modellierungsstudien standen. Ästuarine Bodenformen sind hauptsächlich flachgeböschte Dünen mit mittleren Luvwinkeln von 5 bis 20°. Die Strömungseigenschaften über derartigen, flachen Winkeln sind derzeit nicht genau bekannt. So ist zum Beispiel der Zusammenhang zwischen der Neigung der Leeböschung und dem Vorhandensein oder Fehlen einer intermittierenden oder permanenten Strömungsablösung noch nicht ausreichend verstanden. Außerdem haben ästuarine Dünen ein relativ flaches Tal und steile Böschungen in der Nähe des Kammes, während Flussdünen einen flachen Kamm und in der Nähe des Tals steile Böschungen haben. Die Auswirkungen dieses Unterschieds in der Dünenmorphologie auf die Strömung sind derzeit noch unbekannt. Darüber hinaus wurde der Zusammenhang zwischen einer sich in der Richtung ändernden Gezeitenströmung und der natürlichen Morphologie von Dünen, einschließlich der dreidimensionalen Variationen, noch nicht im Detail untersucht.Im Rahmen der vorgeschlagenen Studie werden mehrere Versuchsreihen in einer großen Laborrinne durchgeführt, um die Strömungseigenschaften (Geschwindigkeit und Turbulenz) über an Ästuardünen angelehnten Modelldünen aus Beton zu charakterisieren. Basierend auf Feldmessungen von Bodenformen in der Weser werden drei Dünenformvarianten untersucht: Steilgeböschte asymmetrische Dünen, flachgeböschte asymmetrische Dünen und flachgeböschte symmetrische Dünen. Darüber hinaus werden hochauflösende numerische Simulationen der Strömung über dreidimensionalen Bodenformfeldern die Rinnenexperimente ergänzen. Mithilfe der Modellsimulationen ist es möglich, die Geschwindigkeitsstrukturen der Gezeitenströmung und die Turbulenzstrukturen über natürlichen, in der Weser vorkommenden Dünenfeldern zu bestimmen. Die Ergebnisse dieses Projekts tragen zu einem besseren Verständnis der komplexen Wechselwirkungen zwischen ästuarinen Dünen und der Gezeitenströmung bei und erlauben eine bessere Parametrisierung der kleinräumigen Prozesse in großräumigen hydro- und morphodynamischen Modellen.

Market Structure and Organization in Agri-Food Value Chains: An Application to the German Dairy Sector

The German dairy value chain is subject to profound structural change resulting in increasingly dominant agents at all stages of the chain, i.e. at the farm level, at the processors' level and at the retailers' level. In particular, the consolidation of retailers has increased retailers' bargaining power vis-à-vis their suppliers. Against this background, the overall objective of this subproject is to analyze the structural change in the dairy sector, particularly at the processors' level, by taking into account firms' strategic interactions along the entire dairy value chain. So far, there exists no theoretical workhorse model that allows for the analysis of interdependencies in a three-layer structure where imperfect competition is considered at all three stages. We aim to close this gap to understand how an increasingly dominant retail industry influences strategic decisions at the dairy processors' level which, in turn, may affect dairy farmers. Building upon a three-layer approach, we first examine whether processors have merger incentives to counter the retailers' bargaining power. We then analyze the differences between cooperatives and for-profit firms concerning their decision on product quality and the number of dairy suppliers. Finally, we assess the implications for upstream farmers which rounds off the picture of structural change in the German dairy sector.

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