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Ignacio Cazcarro
Researcher at University of Zaragoza
Publications - 51
Citations - 1088
Ignacio Cazcarro is an academic researcher from University of Zaragoza. The author has contributed to research in topics: Agriculture & Water use. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 46 publications receiving 763 citations. Previous affiliations of Ignacio Cazcarro include Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute & University of the Basque Country.
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Applying the global RCP–SSP–SPA scenario framework at sub-national scale: A multi-scale and participatory scenario approach
Abiy S. Kebede,Robert J. Nicholls,Andrew Allan,Iñaki Arto,Ignacio Cazcarro,Jose A. Fernandes,Christopher L. Hill,Craig W. Hutton,Susan Kay,Attila N. Lázár,Ian Macadam,Matthew D. Palmer,Natalie Suckall,Emma L. Tompkins,Katharine Vincent,Paul W. Whitehead +15 more
TL;DR: The framework facilitates improved integrated assessments of the potential impacts and plausible adaptation policy choices under uncertain future changing conditions and is transferable to other sub-national socio-ecological settings with multi-scale challenges.
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Multiregional Input-Output Model for the Evaluation of Spanish Water Flows
TL;DR: The paper shows the different location of direct and indirect consumers of water in Spain and how the economic trade and consumption pattern of certain areas has significant impacts on the availability of water resources in other different and often drier regions.
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The water footprint of tourism in Spain
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the virtual (both blue and green consumed) water trade of agricultural and industrial products, but also of services, especially through tourism, for a country in which more than 10% of the gross domestic product derives from this activity.
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Economic growth and the evolution of water consumption in Spain: A structural decomposition analysis
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine how technology, processes of input substitution, and changes in final demand, all of which underlie economic growth, influence water consumption, and find that the growth in Spanish demand (all other things being constant) would have implied an increase in water consumption almost three times the growth actually observed.
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Importance of fisheries for food security across three climate change vulnerable deltas.
Valentina Lauria,Valentina Lauria,Isha Das,Sugata Hazra,Ignacio Cazcarro,Iñaki Arto,Susan Kay,Patrick K. Ofori-Danson,Munir Ahmed,Mostafa A. R. Hossain,Manuel Barange,Jose A. Fernandes +11 more
TL;DR: Economic and integrated modelling using future scenarios suggest that changes in temperature and primary production could reduce fish productivity and fisheries income especially in the Volta and Bangladesh deltas, however these losses could be mitigated by reducing overfishing and improving management.