Environment
Leaked IPCC report: food production could drop 2% a year in warmer world
Climate change will threaten the world’s food supply in coming decades, damaging production while demand is expected to soar, scientists say.
According to the New York Times, a leaked draft of a report under development by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warns that global food production could drop by as much as 2% per decade as temperatures rise.
The IPCC’s last report on the subject, published in 2007, predicted that rising temperatures would boost food production in some countries, offsetting the damage done in others.
However, the drafts of new report – which is not due to be finalised until March 2014, meaning its conclusions may change – are supposedly less optimistic. It predicts that, while rising populations acquiring increased wealth will mean demand may increase by as much as 14% per decade, climate change will reduce supply by 2% per decade.
The agricultural risks “are greatest for tropical countries, given projected impacts that exceed adaptive capacity and higher poverty rates compared with temperate regions”, the New York Times reports.
The research finds that any shortfall would lead to rising food prices that would hit the poorest people hardest of all.
In September, researchers from Anglia Ruskin University claimed that water and food scarcity, caused partly by global warming, might be an underlying cause of conflicts such as the Syrian civil war.
Meanwhile, last week, MPs launched an inquiry assessing food security in the UK. The environment, food and rural affairs committee recognised that climate change and global population growth are putting pressure on food production
Further reading:
MPs launch first inquiry into food security since 2009
Ocean Health Index indicates food security could be at risk
World Food Day focuses on creating a sustainable food system
Scientists talk food security and population at Netherlands conference
Water and food shortages at the root of the Syrian crisis, claims study