Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards

Urban growth in Sri Lanka’s Western Region Megapolis (WRM), home to 5.8 million people and projected to reach 9 million by 2030, has intensified pressure on city region food systems (CRFS). The WRM lacks sufficient arable land to support its population, making it reliant on surrounding districts for...

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Autores principales: Thiel, Felix, Phillips, I., Drechsel, Nikita
Formato: Otro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117308
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author Thiel, Felix
Phillips, I.
Drechsel, Nikita
author_browse Drechsel, Nikita
Phillips, I.
Thiel, Felix
author_facet Thiel, Felix
Phillips, I.
Drechsel, Nikita
author_sort Thiel, Felix
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Urban growth in Sri Lanka’s Western Region Megapolis (WRM), home to 5.8 million people and projected to reach 9 million by 2030, has intensified pressure on city region food systems (CRFS). The WRM lacks sufficient arable land to support its population, making it reliant on surrounding districts for key staples like rice, coconut, fish, and vegetables. These city region’s food flows are increasingly vulnerable to climate change impacts. Droughts in the dry zone are expected to worsen, depleting water reserves and disrupting seasonal agricultural patterns. Between 1985 and 2004, over 1,400 drought events affected 8 million people and 280,000 hectares of crops. Floods and extreme rainfall events are becoming more frequent, causing crop failures and landslides in the wet zone, while extreme heat projected to rise by up to 2°C by 2060 threatens rice and coconut yields in high-producing regions. Sea level rise is also contributing to coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion, threatening groundwater supplies and low-lying farmland. To ensure future food security, city region food systems must be climate resilient. This requires spatial planning, hazard mapping, and adaptive agricultural strategies that account for changing rainfall, temperature, and sea-level conditions across climatic zones and food supply corridors.
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spelling CGSpace1173082025-06-13T04:26:07Z Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards Thiel, Felix Phillips, I. Drechsel, Nikita food systems urban areas vulnerability climate change extreme weather events drought flooding rain temperature sea level climatic zones Urban growth in Sri Lanka’s Western Region Megapolis (WRM), home to 5.8 million people and projected to reach 9 million by 2030, has intensified pressure on city region food systems (CRFS). The WRM lacks sufficient arable land to support its population, making it reliant on surrounding districts for key staples like rice, coconut, fish, and vegetables. These city region’s food flows are increasingly vulnerable to climate change impacts. Droughts in the dry zone are expected to worsen, depleting water reserves and disrupting seasonal agricultural patterns. Between 1985 and 2004, over 1,400 drought events affected 8 million people and 280,000 hectares of crops. Floods and extreme rainfall events are becoming more frequent, causing crop failures and landslides in the wet zone, while extreme heat projected to rise by up to 2°C by 2060 threatens rice and coconut yields in high-producing regions. Sea level rise is also contributing to coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion, threatening groundwater supplies and low-lying farmland. To ensure future food security, city region food systems must be climate resilient. This requires spatial planning, hazard mapping, and adaptive agricultural strategies that account for changing rainfall, temperature, and sea-level conditions across climatic zones and food supply corridors. 2020-01-01 2021-12-31T16:06:47Z 2021-12-31T16:06:47Z Other https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117308 en Open Access CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems Thiel, Felix; Phillips, I.; Drechsel, Nikita. 2020. Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 2p.
spellingShingle food systems
urban areas
vulnerability
climate change
extreme weather events
drought
flooding
rain
temperature
sea level
climatic zones
Thiel, Felix
Phillips, I.
Drechsel, Nikita
Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title_full Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title_fullStr Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title_full_unstemmed Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title_short Megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
title_sort megapolis city region food systems and their vulnerability towards climate change related hazards
topic food systems
urban areas
vulnerability
climate change
extreme weather events
drought
flooding
rain
temperature
sea level
climatic zones
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117308
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