Agriculture has driven important changes within the Prairie Pothole Region with major yield increases in recent decades. Changes are ongoing, with widespread wetland drainage in areas, and evidence of growing rural conflict over drainage and other issues. Research to develop common understandings of change can help address conflict and develop shared vision. Here, we used expert elicitation via a Delphi process to develop scenarios of the future, understand potential trajectories of change, drivers, and effects, and develop boundary objects that can be used in building dialogue. Using a grounded and inductive approach we identified three organizing principles that drove scenarios—future agricultural growth, the future regulatory environment, and climate change. Although six scenarios were developed, only two achieved consensus as credible (i.e., ≥75% indicating this was supported by current understanding of the system and its changes). Both of these scenarios (Agriculture as Usual and Unmitigated Climate Change) are typified by limited regulation. All scenarios suggest rural population will continue to decrease (or “decrease or stay the same”; consensus reached in four of six scenarios). Relatively high agreement was also seen for changes in social license to farm, flood risk, wetland extent, and biodiversity, with lesser agreement on economic indicators.
These scenarios can be used in workshops with methods such as multi-criteria decision analysis and multi-utility attribute theory with stakeholders to manage conflict or identify pathways for action towards desired scenarios
The scenarios were made in: 2021
The scenarios look out to: 2050