The Future Of Cereal Does Not Look Good
Grantham Research Institute and Duncan Clark,
the Guardian
19 September, 2012
Food
is one of society's key sensitivities to climate. A year of not
enough or too much rainfall, a hot spell or cold snap at the wrong
time, or extremes, like flooding and storms, can have a significant
effect on local crop yields and livestock production. While modern
farming technologies and techniques have helped to reduce this
vulnerability and boost production, the impact of recent droughts in
the USA, China and Russiaon
global cereal production highlight a glaring potential future
vulnerability.
There
is some evidence that climate
change is
already having a measurable affect on the quality and quantity of
food produced globally. But this is small when compared with the
significant increase in global food production that has been achieved
over the past few decades. Isolating the influence of climatic change
from all the other trends is difficult, but one recent Stanford
University study found
that increases in global production of maize and wheat since 1980
would have been about 5% higher were it not for climate change.
All
else being equal, rising carbon dioxide concentrations – the main
driver of climate change – could increase production of some crops,
such as rice, soybean and wheat. However, the changing climate would
affect the length and quality of the growing season and farmers could
experience increasing damage to their crops, caused by a rising
intensity of droughts, flooding or fires.
The latest
IPCC report predicted
improving conditions for food production in the mid to high latitudes
over the next few decades, including in the northern USA, Canada,
northern Europe and Russia. Conversely, parts of the subtropics, such
as the Mediterranean region and parts of Australia, and the low
latitudes, could experience declining conditions. For example, across
Africa, yields from rain-fed agriculture could decline by as much as
50% by 2020. Beyond this, if global temperatures rise by more than
about 1–3°C, declining conditions could be experienced over a much
larger area.
The
future course of global food production will depend on how well
societies can adapt to such climatic changes, as well as the
influence of other pressures, such as the competition for land from
biofuel production. The IPCC concluded that
in the poorer, low-latitude countries, climate change could seriously
challenge the capacity to adapt for a warming of more than 3°C. The
richer, higher latitude countries are likely to have a greater
capacity to adapt and exploit changing climatic conditions.
But
we can't ignore the potential for "surprises" down the
line. There are many uncertainties in such predictions. The world has
not seen such changes in climate for millennia, and so it is
impossible to know how our agricultural systems will react in the
real world. For example, the complex interlinkages with the impacts
of climate change on pests, diseases and pollinators, like bees, are
largely unknown. Also, climate models have difficulty in accurately
predicting the detailed local environmental changes that are
important for food production, particularly weather extremes.
A
looming vulnerability is the world's fisheries,
which provide an important source of protein for at least half the
world's population. Fisheries are already stressed by
overexploitation and pollution. Warming surface waters in the oceans,
rivers and lakes, as well as sea level rise and melting ice, will
adversely affect many fish species. Some marine fish species are
already adapting by migrating to the high latitudes, but others, such
as Arctic and freshwater species, have nowhere to go. The absorption
of carbon dioxide emissions by the oceans also has a direct impact on
marine ecosystems through ocean acidification.
But
what does this mean for food security – the price and availability
of food for the world's seven billion people? A 2011
Foresight report concluded
that climate change is a relatively small factor here, at least in
the short term, when compared with the rapid increases in global food
demand expected in the next decade. On current
projections,
by 2050 there will be between one and three billion additional mouths
to feed. As people become wealthier, they also demand more food and
disproportionally more meat, which requires far more land and water
resources per calorie consumed. When these factors are combined, it
points toward a future of increasing and more volatile food prices.
As
was seen during the 2007–08 food price spikes, the poorest
countries and communities will be hit first and hardest.
The Foresight
report concluded
that international policy has an important role to play here –
today, despite plentiful supplies of food globally, almost one
billion people are undernourished.
Finally,
food production itself is a significant emitter of greenhouse gases,
as well as a cause of environmental degradation in many parts of the
world. Agriculture contributes about
15% of all emissions,
on a par with transport. When land conversion and the wider food
system are taken into account the total contribution of food may be
as high as 30%. This means that to limit the long-run impacts of
climate change, food production must become not only more resilient
to climate but also more sustainable and low-carbon itself.
• This
article was written by Nicola Ranger of the Grantham
Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at
LSE in collaboration with the Guardian
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.