Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought

The impact of climate change on agriculture depends on the environmental and socio-economic contexts in which the changes occur. However, current tools to anticipate climate change impacts focus almost entirely on biological and environmental processes. For example, most large-scale crop models can...

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Autores principales: Simelton, Elisabeth, Fraser EDG, Termansen, Mette, Benton, Tim G., Gosling SN, South A, Arnell, N.W., Challinor, Andrew J., Dougill, Andrew J., Forster PM
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33412
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author Simelton, Elisabeth
Fraser EDG
Termansen, Mette
Benton, Tim G.
Gosling SN
South A
Arnell, N.W.
Challinor, Andrew J.
Dougill, Andrew J.
Forster PM
author_browse Arnell, N.W.
Benton, Tim G.
Challinor, Andrew J.
Dougill, Andrew J.
Forster PM
Fraser EDG
Gosling SN
Simelton, Elisabeth
South A
Termansen, Mette
author_facet Simelton, Elisabeth
Fraser EDG
Termansen, Mette
Benton, Tim G.
Gosling SN
South A
Arnell, N.W.
Challinor, Andrew J.
Dougill, Andrew J.
Forster PM
author_sort Simelton, Elisabeth
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The impact of climate change on agriculture depends on the environmental and socio-economic contexts in which the changes occur. However, current tools to anticipate climate change impacts focus almost entirely on biological and environmental processes. For example, most large-scale crop models can identify where yields are sensitive to new temperatures and CO2 concentrations but do not include any socio-economic factors that may enable (or inhibit) farmers’ abilities to adapt. To address this gap, this paper uses national scale socio-economic, meteorological and agricultural data to identify socio-economic factors that have made rice, maize and wheat production resilient and sensitive to past droughts. Results suggest that cereal harvests in countries undergoing economic and political transition are most vulnerable to droughts and that factors related to investments in the agriculture sector (such as the amount of fertilizer used by farmers or the amount of Gross Domestic Product produced by a nation’s agricultural sector) help reduce vulnerability. While results are limited by data quality and availability, this study provides preliminary quantitative insights that highlight important areas for further research on the socio-economic factors that create vulnerability to climate change.
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spelling CGSpace334122021-02-24T12:53:36Z Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought Simelton, Elisabeth Fraser EDG Termansen, Mette Benton, Tim G. Gosling SN South A Arnell, N.W. Challinor, Andrew J. Dougill, Andrew J. Forster PM grain drought climate agriculture food security The impact of climate change on agriculture depends on the environmental and socio-economic contexts in which the changes occur. However, current tools to anticipate climate change impacts focus almost entirely on biological and environmental processes. For example, most large-scale crop models can identify where yields are sensitive to new temperatures and CO2 concentrations but do not include any socio-economic factors that may enable (or inhibit) farmers’ abilities to adapt. To address this gap, this paper uses national scale socio-economic, meteorological and agricultural data to identify socio-economic factors that have made rice, maize and wheat production resilient and sensitive to past droughts. Results suggest that cereal harvests in countries undergoing economic and political transition are most vulnerable to droughts and that factors related to investments in the agriculture sector (such as the amount of fertilizer used by farmers or the amount of Gross Domestic Product produced by a nation’s agricultural sector) help reduce vulnerability. While results are limited by data quality and availability, this study provides preliminary quantitative insights that highlight important areas for further research on the socio-economic factors that create vulnerability to climate change. 2010-08-01 2013-07-31T11:48:14Z 2013-07-31T11:48:14Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33412 en Open Access Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy Simelton E, Fraser EDG, Termansen M, Benton TG, Gosling SN, South A, Arnell NW, Challinor AJ, Dougill AJ, Forster PM. 2010. Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought. Working Paper No. 29. Leeds UK: Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy (CCCEP).
spellingShingle grain
drought
climate
agriculture
food security
Simelton, Elisabeth
Fraser EDG
Termansen, Mette
Benton, Tim G.
Gosling SN
South A
Arnell, N.W.
Challinor, Andrew J.
Dougill, Andrew J.
Forster PM
Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title_full Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title_fullStr Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title_short Climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production: a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
title_sort climate change and the socioeconomics of global food production a quantitative analysis of how socioeconomic factors influence the vulnerability of grain crops to drought
topic grain
drought
climate
agriculture
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33412
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