Marianne Löwgren
Linköping University
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Featured researches published by Marianne Löwgren.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2005
Berit Arheimer; Marianne Löwgren; Bodil Charlotta Pers; Jörgen Rosberg
A hydrological-based model (HBV-NP) was applied to a catchment (1900 km2) in the southern part of Sweden. Careful characterization of the present load situation and the potential for improved treatment or reduced soil leaching were analyzed. Several scenarios were modeled to find strategies to reach the Swedish environmental goals of reducing anthropogenic nitrogen load by 30% and phosphorus load by 20%. It was stated that the goals could be reached by different approaches that would affect different polluters and social sectors. However, no single measure was enough by itself. Instead, a combination of measures was necessary to achieve the goals. The nitrogen goal was the most difficult to attain. In order to be cost-effective, these measures should be applied to areas contributing the most to the net loading of the sea. This strategy could reduce the costs by 70%-80% when compared with implementing the measures in the entire catchment. Integrated catchment models may thus be helpful tools for reducing costs in environmental control programs.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2005
Anna Jöborn; Ingela Danielsson; Berit Arheimer; Anna K. Jönsson; Martin Larsson; Lernnart J Lundqvist; Marianne Löwgren; Karin Tonderski
Integrated Water Management for Eutrophication Control : Public Participation, Pricing Policy and Catchment Modeling
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2005
Marianne Löwgren
Abstract The key objective of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD) is to promote sustainable water use by protecting water resources. Here, we investigate how the economic consequences of a set of water management regulations is received by a group of stakeholders in the Rönneå catchment. We explore three themes from an economic point of view: i) perceived causes of eutrophication, ii) preferences regarding water use, and iii) the extent to which the polluter-pays principle should be applied. There is a common understanding about the intentions in the WFD to enhance cost-effective water use. All stakeholder groups largely share a similar picture of the causes of water quality deterioration. However, there is not one cost-effective and fair solution. Several mixes of remedial measures within the same catchment are possible, depending on the scale of action. Despite potential economic gains from cooperation between sectors, the participants regard the individual polluter-pays principle as the most feasible mode of funding for remedial programs, supported by subsidies. There is little demand for more market institutions (emission fees, tradable emission permits). The stakeholders have a conservative view of water management, i.e. they accept the present combination of regulations and economic incentives, and they are fully aware of the complexity of the issue. In general, the WFD recommendations for the calculation of cost-effective abatement strategies seem to imply an underestimation of the value of external effects in the decision-making process.
Environmental Management | 1991
Marianne Löwgren; Björn Segrell
The aim of this study is to analyze the environmental agenda in Sweden during the last two decades. A content analysis was made of all articles in a Swedish journal,Miljö-Aktuellt. Further, to elucidate the evolutionary process of problem formulation and reformulation, two cases were investigated, dealing with the impact of plant nutrients and mercury on surface water quality. The transport of heavy metals is an essential component of the ecological process and problem of acidification, and similarly, plant nutrients are part of the concept of eutrophication. Two concepts, the research cycle and the policy cycle, are tentatively applied to the conceptualizations of acidification and eutrophication. Additional data for the latter part of the study is supplied from parliamentary motions during 1973–1989.The substance/media focus of the 1970s was connected to a point-source abatement strategy, which mainly aimed at removing negative effects at a local level. The development of a national preventive strategy is traced in problem formulations related to “processes” going on in the technosphere: wastes, noise, energy production, traffic, and toxic substances. This period lasted from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s, and the need for improved resource management as a means to control environmental problems has been a generally accepted idea. However, this does not mean that measures actually taken are sufficient in a material balance perspective. Further, in the 1980s there was a strong emphasis upon processes in the ecosphere. This focus also implies source-related policies. To a certain extent, the remedies are within the scope of national capabilities, but the international dimension is becoming increasingly important. Scientific proofs of resource and environment degradation are essential to induce political action and to stimulate international cooperation. From this study, however, it is not possible to assess the existence of any particular policy-triggering information.
Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica | 1990
Gunnar Karlsson; Marianne Löwgren
Abstract Land use, within the area studied, displayed two large-scale changes over a period of 100 years. One was the transition from ley cultivation to grain production. The other change was the decrease in the number of livestock. The phosphorus balance for the area, accompanying these changes, showed that the early net export of about 1 kg per hectare and year at the end of the last century became a net import during the 1940s. Agricultural practices have changed, decreasing the share of land exposed to surface erosion, but the change is insignificant compared to the transport change found in the watercourse. The decreasing use of organic manure and the transition to the use of inorganic fertilizers coincided with the changes of phosphorus transports observed. It is also evident that the acid/base effects of fertilizers, the amounts of lime (CaO) used, the increasing areas of soils with a declining pH and the transport decrease in the water all occur during the same period of time. To conclude, the mos...
Journal of Environmental Management | 2003
Magnus Gullstrand; Marianne Löwgren; Reinhold Castensson
Archive | 1988
Reinhold Castensson; Marianne Löwgren; Jan Sundin
Archive | 2000
Ola Palm; Marianne Löwgren; Hb Wittgren
Archive | 1988
Marianne Löwgren
GeoJournal | 1989
Marianne Löwgren; Thomas Hillmo; Ulrik Lohm