Household-level socio-economic drivers of the trade-offs and synergies in the food, water and energy nexus: Empirical evidence from Amathole district municipality, South Africa

Trade-offs (TOs) and synergies (SYs) are unintended or observed consequences within the household food, water and energy (F-W-E) nexus, where TOs imply gains in one resource hinder others and SYs reflect mutual benefits across resources. Yet, little attention has been paid to these TOs and SYs, with...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thulani Ningi, Amon Taruvinga, Leocadia Zhou, Saul Ngarava
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2025-12-01
Series:Water-Energy Nexus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2588912525000104
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Trade-offs (TOs) and synergies (SYs) are unintended or observed consequences within the household food, water and energy (F-W-E) nexus, where TOs imply gains in one resource hinder others and SYs reflect mutual benefits across resources. Yet, little attention has been paid to these TOs and SYs, with most concentrating on the securities that are both a pre-requisite and consequence of a nexus interaction. This is in lieu of further (un)conscious alienation of the household pre-requisites that drive these TOs and SYs. This study assessed the determinants of TOs and SYs in the household F-W-E nexus. A cross-sectional survey was employed targeting 655 randomly selected households in the Amathole District of South Africa. Trade-offs and synergies within the F-W-E nexus were quantified based on the experiences reported by households in the study area and were normalised using min–max normalisation. The study employed a Tobit regression model to examine the factors driving these TOs and SYs within the F-W-E nexus. A trade-offs and synergy index (TSI) of 53.7% was revealed suggesting that most of the respondents in the study area face more TOs than SYs in the F-W-E nexus. Additionally, the TSI was negatively influenced by household size, access to credit, participation in farming activities and increases in food prices. In conclusion, the study argues that socio-economic factors drive the household level F-W-E nexus TOs and SYs. Recommendations include strategic targeting of socio-economic factors that condition the TOs and SYs within the household F-W-E nexus.
ISSN:2588-9125