To facilitate a fair bioeconomy transition, stronger regional-level linkages are needed
Journal article, 2022

The great hopes in Brussels that a circular bioeconomy will help bridge the growing divide between urban and rural areas and allow the hinterlands to prosper from 'green growth' are addressed in this article, which reflects on insights from three Nordic case studies of brown, green and blue biomass use at different levels of technology readiness. A closer examination of the forward, backward, fiscal and final demand linkages at regional level from increased biomass utilization, from eastern Finland and northern Sweden to Jutland and North Atlantic islands, suggests that linkages are and will remain relatively weak, predominantly dashing the expectations. As suppliers and exporters of natural resources, disadvantaged regions may all too easily get locked into a 'staples trap', where the value creation evaporates owing in part to the steep start-up costs and the associated boom-and-bust cycles, which place them in a weak position vis-a-vis the resource manufacturers and consumers. To make the prospects of development, employment and prosperity in the hinterlands materialize, measures are needed to strengthen the regional-level economic linkages. Regional-level revolving funds based on benefit-sharing instruments related to natural resources can be used to bolster economic development, as reflected in such schemes present in both China and Canada. We call for further research into whether and how such approaches can be replicated successfully by channeling revenues from biomass cultivation to regional-scale revolving funds, with mandates to strengthen long-term economic linkages and prosperity within the hinterlands. (c) 2022 The Authors. Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining published by Society of Industrial Chemistry and John Wiley & Sons Ltd

biomass

disadvantaged regions

Hartwick's rule

green growth

staples trap

natural resources

Author

Mikael S. Andersen

Aarhus University

Lotte D. Christensen

Aarhus University

Jakob Donner-Amnell

University of Eastern Finland

Per O. Eikeland

Fridtjof Nansen Institute

Barbara Hedeler

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Roger Hildingsson

Lund University

Bengt Johansson

Lund University

Jamil Khan

Lund University

Annica Kronsell

University of Gothenburg

Tor H. J. Inderberg

Fridtjof Nansen Institute

Helle O. Nielsen

Aarhus University

Massimo Pizzol

Aarhus University

Rauno Sairinen

University of Eastern Finland

Jon B. Skjaerseth

Fridtjof Nansen Institute

Patrik Soderholm

Luleå University of Technology

Tuula Teravainen

University of Eastern Finland

Marianne Thomsen

Aarhus University

Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining

1932-104X (ISSN) 1932-1031 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 4 929-941

New Nordic Ways to Green Growth (NOWAGG)

NordForsk (LTU-2973-2016(NOWAGG)), 2018-04-30 -- 2020-04-30.

Subject Categories

Economic Geography

Environmental Management

Human Geography

DOI

10.1002/bbb.2363

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9