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A Systemic Approach to Traps and Opportunities for Sustainable Value Chains in Norwegian Forestry

Stoeren Wigum, Kristin (2022) A Systemic Approach to Traps and Opportunities for Sustainable Value Chains in Norwegian Forestry. In: Proceedings of Relating Systems Thinking and Design, RSD11, 3-16 Oct 2022, Brighton, United Kingdom.

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Abstract

This paper is anchored in experiences from coastal forestry in Norway and a three years interregional project aimed at mobilising stakeholders in the value chain from forestry to industry and the end-use of wood-based products, involving politicians and public administration in cooperation networks. This paper argues for and discusses how systemic design approaches should complement today’s use of Design Thinking (British Design Council 2004) in this work to tackle complexity and wicked problems (Rittel, Webber, 1973). Compared to its potential, the Norwegian coastal forestry today is in a state of low performance with deeply rooted causes that are not easily solved by innovation events. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2021, 2022) is calling for urgent action. It has provided global society with only three years (2022–2025) to start intervening at a systemic level to reduce climate gas emissions over the next 30 years and reach a maximum 1.5 ℃ temperature increase goal.

Global forests are seen as one of the most important means of reducing carbon dioxide through their growth and existence. They also promote biodiversity, timber and bio-fibre substituting fossil-based human-made materials, products and energy solutions (UN Food and Agriculture Organization, 2020). Forests as a resource must be approached using local perspectives and care in parallel with a holistic view of planetary boundaries, including concern for social sustainability. The Norwegian forestry industry is experiencing resistance towards industrialised logging. This is not an unimportant hindrance to the development of industrialised production and more advanced value chains for wooden resources. Although the volume of forest resources in Norway is increasing (by 12.5% in 2020, SSB), ripe spruce and pine are hard to reach for logging in non-reachable areas. The planting of these forests started approximately 100 years ago with the aim of restoring deforestation caused by industrialisation in all of Europe. This article introduces system traps and opportunities along with Meadows’ (2008) 12 leverage points for increased awareness as possibilities for intervention. It also discusses how delays and long-term system behavioural patterns are traps and opportunities to intervene in the archetype of the value chain structure, starting with forestry. However, a surprise to many stakeholders may be the role social systems and information flow play in establishing sustainable value chains. Systemic design may lead the sector to explore relations and connections over time rather than physical elements and somewhat fragmented parts of the system.

Item Type: Conference/Workshop Item (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: forestry, socio-ecological systems, sustainability, system dynamics, interventions for change, systemic design
Divisions: Faculty of Design
Date Deposited: 04 Apr 2024 14:39
Last Modified: 04 Apr 2024 14:39
URI: https://openresearch.ocadu.ca/id/eprint/4260

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