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Suitability

Jip Claassens edited this page Jan 18, 2023 · 21 revisions

Suitability (aka Transition Potential, Utility, or Land Use Value) is a combination of factors that express the added value of allocating a resource to a purpose.

In the context of Land Use Modelling:

  • resources are usually Land Units, often organised as a grid of raster-cells.
  • purposes are usually Land Use Types
  • the added value is expressed as:
  1. ratio (which relates to the use of the pseudonym Transition Potential) or
  2. monetary unit of Yield per [Land Unit]] or area per unit of duration (say: [EUR*m^-2*year^-1]) or
  3. the capitalized value thereof (say: [EUR*m^-2]).
  • suitability is operationalized as a set of value maps, one for each Land Use Type.

common factors

  • physical factors, such as soil type that determine the annual yield of specific production plans.
  • locational factors (usually taken as positive, representing interaction value, although a more physical interpretation related to negative costs of transportation and travel would make sense too).
  • transition costs of destruction and reconstruction (usually represted as one time costs, which forces a modeler to think on annualisation or capitalisation)
  • location specific subsidies and/or taxes
  • spatial planning restrictions (sometimes taken separately in Allow maps).
  • physical restrictions on transition (which are sometimes time dependent).

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