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Briefing Rooms

Global Climate Change: Questions and Answers

Q. What effects would global climate change likely have on world agriculture?

Climate change and world agricultural productionA. Four recent analyses of projected increases in global temperature of 2.8 to 5.2°C (5.0 to 9.4°F) indicate that climate change would likely inhibit world agricultural production by the end of the 21st century. Declines are due to reductions in aggregate crop production of between 0.5 and 1.3 percent, depending on the analysis. Although wheat production may either rise or fall relative to production under current climatic conditions, world production of other grains (primarily rice and corn) and nongrain crops would likely decrease.

Declines in crop production would likely be offset somewhat by increases in livestock production. Livestock production increases on average primarily because losses in areas where farmers depend on crops for livestock feed are more than offset by the expansion of grazing on lands no longer suitable for crop production. Grazing land expands because cropland soils become drier in many locations (Darwin et al., 1995). Total agricultural production declines by 0.3 to 0.8 percent. These production changes are associated with changes in average per capita expenditures on consumer goods and services that range from -0.11 to 0 percent (Darwin, 1999). These generally lower levels of consumer purchases are due to declines in the availability to consumers not only of agricultural commodities themselves, but also of consumer goods and services that rely on agricultural commodities as inputs.

Climate-induced impacts on agricultural productivity are not equally distributed around the world. In many tropical areas, warming reduces soil moisture, thereby lowering productivity on existing and potential agricultural lands. In many cooler areas, however, warming increases soil temperature, and, if not constrained by low soil moisture, raises productivity on existing agricultural lands and expands the potential agricultural land base. Aggregate crop production in Southeast Asia (e.g., Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand), for example, would likely decline (by 2.6 to 4.8 percent in recent analyses), but would likely rise in Japan (by 6.2 to 10.4 percent). Previous results from the Future Agricultural Resources Model as well as from other models are available in Darwin et al. (1995) and Schimmelpfennig et al. (1996).

These results are subject to a number of limitations.

  • First, links in the chain from climate to water resources and on to agricultural production are inadequately simulated. Water storage in alpine snowpack, for example, is not taken into account. Water is also treated as though it could be transported cost-free anywhere within a given region. And water is implicitly assumed to always be beneficial.

  • Second, potential impacts on weather variability—both year-to-year and short-term extreme events such as floods, storms, and dry spells—are overlooked.

  • Third, climate changes are applied to 1990 economic conditions rather than projections of future economic conditions.

  • Fourth, the direct growth-promoting effects of greater atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide on plants are not considered.

Research that overcomes shortcomings with regard to water resources, weather variability, and future economic conditions is underway. Research on the direct growth-promoting effects of greater concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide has recently been completed.

References

  • Darwin, R.F. 1999. "A FARMer's View of the Ricardian Approach to Measuring Effect of Climatic Change on Agriculture," Climatic Change 41(3/4):371-411.
  • Darwin, R.F., M. Tsigas, J. Lewandrowski, and A. Raneses. 1995. World Agriculture and Climate Change: Economic Adaptations. AER-703. U.S. Dept. Agr., Econ. Res. Serv., Washington, DC.
  • Schimmelpfennig, D., J. Lewandrowski, J. Reilly, M. Tsigas, and I. Parry. 1996. Agricultural Adaptation to Climate Change: Issues of Longrun Sustainability. AER-740. U.S. Dept. Agr., Econ. Res. Serv., Washington, DC.

For more information, contact: Carol Jones

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: January 23, 2001