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Climate impacts on global agriculture emerge earlier in new generation of climate and crop models

Authors :
Atul K. Jain
Sara Minoli
Oscar Castillo
Toshichika Iizumi
Christoph Müller
David Kelly
Cynthia Rosenzweig
Joep F. Schyns
Tzu-Shun Lin
Stefan Lange
Masashi Okada
Sam S. Rabin
James A. Franke
Kathrin Fuchs
Oleksandr Mialyk
Julia M. Schneider
Tommaso Stella
Cheryl Porter
Wenfeng Liu
Andrew Smerald
Babacar Faye
Christian Folberth
Clemens Scheer
Ian Foster
Elisabeth J. Moyer
Rastislav Skalsky
Florian Zabel
Joshua Elliott
Heidi Webber
Meridel Phillips
Jens Heinke
Gerrit Hoogenboom
Jonas Jägermeyr
Alex C. Ruane
Jose R. Guarin
Nikolay Khabarov
Juraj Balkovic
Haynes Stephens
Multidisciplinary Water Management
Source :
Nature Food, 2(11), 873-885. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Potential climate-related impacts on future crop yield are a major societal concern. Previous projections of the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project’s Global Gridded Crop Model Intercomparison based on the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 identified substantial climate impacts on all major crops, but associated uncertainties were substantial. Here we report new twenty-first-century projections using ensembles of latest-generation crop and climate models. Results suggest markedly more pessimistic yield responses for maize, soybean and rice compared to the original ensemble. Mean end-of-century maize productivity is shifted from +5% to −6% (SSP126) and from +1% to −24% (SSP585)—explained by warmer climate projections and improved crop model sensitivities. In contrast, wheat shows stronger gains (+9% shifted to +18%, SSP585), linked to higher CO2 concentrations and expanded high-latitude gains. The ‘emergence’ of climate impacts consistently occurs earlier in the new projections—before 2040 for several main producing regions. While future yield estimates remain uncertain, these results suggest that major breadbasket regions will face distinct anthropogenic climatic risks sooner than previously anticipated. Climate change affects agricultural productivity. New systematic global agricultural yield projections of the major crops were conducted using ensembles of the latest generation of crop and climate models. Substantial shifts in global crop productivity due to climate change will occur within the next 20 years—several decades sooner than previous projections—highlighting the need for targeted food system adaptation and risk management in the coming decades.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26621355
Volume :
2
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Food
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e82f3a99d2028c9eeb5f3e924e35a990