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Impacts of climate change on food production David B. Lobell [email protected]

Impacts of climate change on food production David B. Lobell [email protected]

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Impacts of climate change on food production

David B. [email protected]

Recent and Future CO2 levels

B1

A1b

A2

2 x pre-industrial

Projections for average global temperatures

IPCC, 2007

Measuring the CO2 fertilization effect

FACE: Free-air CO2 enrichment (Long et al. 2006)

Direct effects of climate changeThe main effects of warming:-faster rates of development (see below)-faster rates of photosynthesis and respiration-higher rates of evapotranspiration (important in dry regions)-fewer frosts (important in cold regions)

In a cooler year, this process can take ~10 days longer than in warmer year, which means 10 or more days to photosynthesize

“birth” “adolescensce” “adulthood” “death”

Direct effects of climate change-So warming can have some positive and some negative effects.

-The net balance differs depending on crop and location

-Overall, crops in most regions prefer cooler temperatures

Temperature Change (ºC)Yie

ld

Ch

ang

e (

%) Average Global Yields vs. temperatures, 1961-2002

Crop Yield Changes for CO2 and climate change

Red = no management changes

Green = “adaptation”

IPCC, 2007

3 questions:

1.What are impacts without adaptation?2.How helpful are adaptations?3.What do yield changes imply for hunger?

Temperature

Yie

ld

Summary so far

1) Higher CO2 will help crop yields, more so for C3 crops than C4 crops

Summary so far

1) Higher CO2 will help crop yields, more so for C3 crops than C4 crops

2) Warming will reduce yields in most locations

3) Precipitation changes will be important in some areas.

Human responses to climate change

Farmers and scientists are not dumb

In response to these pressures, people are likely to adapt.

Two main types of adaptations1)Trade2)Management changes

Human responses to climate change

Cool nations “win”

Warm nations “lose”

1) Trade

One example of estimated impacts for 2x CO2 (from Cline 2007)

Human responses to climate change2) Management changes

Red = no management changes

Green = “adaptation”

IPCC, 2007

Summary so far

1) Higher CO2 will help crop yields, more so for C3 crops than C4 crops

2) Warming will reduce yields in most locations

3) Precipitation changes will be important in some areas, but projections of future precipitation are very uncertain.

4) Adaptation will help to reduce impacts on global food production, assuming that poorer countries can afford to import food, that the right investments are made in new technologies, and that farmers implement adaptations quickly enough to avoid big losses. (Three big assumptions)

5) In tropical countries, impacts could be quite large (up to 30-50% losses) even in 20 years

6) For the globe, impacts are most likely small until ~2050 or 2xCO2. But if CO2 levels go much higher than 550 ppm, then effects could be quite large.

Future CO2 for several emission scenarios

B1

A1b

A2

2 x pre-industrial

What will this mean for the crops we depend on?

Photosynthesis: CO2 + H20 sugar + O2

Most photosynthesis is called C3, but some plants have developed a mechanism to avoid photorespiration by concentrating CO2 in the leaf interior. This makes them more productive in very hot and sunny conditions, and less sensitive to changes in CO2

C3 crops: wheat, rice, soybean, barley, and most othersC4 crops: maize (corn), sorghum, millet, sugarcane.

Average climate model projections of soil moisture change by 2080

IPCC, 2007