Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades

In many discussions of climate change impacts in agriculture, the large magnitudes of expected impacts toward the end of the century are used to emphasize that most of the risks are to future generations. However, this perspective misses the important fact that demand growth for food is expected to...

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Main Authors: David B Lobell, Claudia Tebaldi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2014-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/9/7/074003
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author David B Lobell
Claudia Tebaldi
author_facet David B Lobell
Claudia Tebaldi
author_sort David B Lobell
collection DOAJ
description In many discussions of climate change impacts in agriculture, the large magnitudes of expected impacts toward the end of the century are used to emphasize that most of the risks are to future generations. However, this perspective misses the important fact that demand growth for food is expected to be much slower after 2050 than before it, and that the next two decades represent the bulk of growth before 2050. Thus, impacts of smaller magnitude in the near-term can be as or more consequential for food prices or food security as larger magnitude impacts in the future. Here we estimate the risks that climate trends over the next 10 or 20 years could have large impacts on global yields of wheat and maize, with a focus on scenarios that would cut the expected rates of yield gains in half. We find that because of global warming, the chance of climate trends over a 20 year period causing a 10% yield loss has increased from a less than 1 in 200 chance arising from internal climate variability alone, to a 1 in 10 chance for maize and 1 in 20 chance for wheat. Estimated risks for maize are higher because of a greater geographic concentration than wheat, as well as a slightly more negative aggregate temperature sensitivity. Global warming has also greatly increased the chance of climate trends large enough to halve yield trends over a 10 year period, with a roughly 1 in 4 chance for maize and 1 in 6 chance for wheat. Estimated risks are slightly larger when using climate projections from a large ensemble of a single climate model that more fully explores internal climate variability, than a multi-model ensemble that more fully explores model uncertainty. Although scenarios of climate impacts large enough to halve yield growth rates are still fairly unlikely, they may warrant consideration by institutions potentially affected by associated changes in international food prices.
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spelling doaj.art-4d7fdcb14bd44f5aa4b4049c4b75b4e02023-08-09T14:47:01ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262014-01-019707400310.1088/1748-9326/9/7/074003Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decadesDavid B Lobell0Claudia Tebaldi1Department of Environmental Earth System Science and Center on Food Security and the Environment, Stanford University , Stanford, CA 94305, USAClimate and Global Dynamics Division, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO 80305, USAIn many discussions of climate change impacts in agriculture, the large magnitudes of expected impacts toward the end of the century are used to emphasize that most of the risks are to future generations. However, this perspective misses the important fact that demand growth for food is expected to be much slower after 2050 than before it, and that the next two decades represent the bulk of growth before 2050. Thus, impacts of smaller magnitude in the near-term can be as or more consequential for food prices or food security as larger magnitude impacts in the future. Here we estimate the risks that climate trends over the next 10 or 20 years could have large impacts on global yields of wheat and maize, with a focus on scenarios that would cut the expected rates of yield gains in half. We find that because of global warming, the chance of climate trends over a 20 year period causing a 10% yield loss has increased from a less than 1 in 200 chance arising from internal climate variability alone, to a 1 in 10 chance for maize and 1 in 20 chance for wheat. Estimated risks for maize are higher because of a greater geographic concentration than wheat, as well as a slightly more negative aggregate temperature sensitivity. Global warming has also greatly increased the chance of climate trends large enough to halve yield trends over a 10 year period, with a roughly 1 in 4 chance for maize and 1 in 6 chance for wheat. Estimated risks are slightly larger when using climate projections from a large ensemble of a single climate model that more fully explores internal climate variability, than a multi-model ensemble that more fully explores model uncertainty. Although scenarios of climate impacts large enough to halve yield growth rates are still fairly unlikely, they may warrant consideration by institutions potentially affected by associated changes in international food prices.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/9/7/074003global warmingfood securityclimate impacts
spellingShingle David B Lobell
Claudia Tebaldi
Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
Environmental Research Letters
global warming
food security
climate impacts
title Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
title_full Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
title_fullStr Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
title_full_unstemmed Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
title_short Getting caught with our plants down: the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
title_sort getting caught with our plants down the risks of a global crop yield slowdown from climate trends in the next two decades
topic global warming
food security
climate impacts
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/9/7/074003
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