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Climate Change Increases Food Security
Concerns
By J.R. Pegg
WASHINGTON, DC, December 5, 2006, (ENS) – The developing world’s struggle for
food security will increase unless new crop varieties are
deployed to help poor farmers adapt to climate change,
agricultural experts and climate scientists warned Monday.
Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research, CGIAR, in Washington, DC,
the panel said hotter, drier weather will result in shorter
growing seasons and smaller crop yields across much of the
developing world, challenging the livelihoods of billions of
people.
A new CGIAR research report finds projected temperature
increases and shifts in rainfall patterns are likely to
decrease growing periods in sub-Saharan Africa by more than 20
percent, with some of the world’s poorest nations in East and
Central Africa at greatest risk.
Harvest time in India's Punjab state, known as the
country's breadbasket (Photo courtesy Government of
Punjab) CGIAR also cited new research that shows
warming will slash wheat production in India’s breadbasket.
Production will drop 50 percent by 2050 - a decrease that
could put as many as 200 million people at greater risk of
hunger.
As climate change shifts wheat production to the north
across the globe, it will also create opportunities for
farmers in North America and Russia.
But increased yields from northern countries will not be
able to make up for declining production in the developing
world, according to the study.
"Developing countries, which are already home to most of
the world's poor and malnourished people and have contributed
relatively little to the causes of global warming, are going
to bear the brunt of climate change and suffer most from its
negative consequences," said Louis Verchot, a climate change
scientist with the World Agroforestry Centre, one of 15
research centers allied under the CGIAR.
Louis Verchot is lead scientist on climate change with the
World Agroforestry Centre. (Photo courtesy Earth Negotiations
Bulletin) “Anticipating and planning for
climate change is imperative if farmers in poor countries are
to avert forecast declines in yields of the world's most
important food crops,” said Verchot.
In response to these concerns, CGIAR has announced a plan
to strengthen its work with climate researchers to reduce the
vulnerability of developing countries to climate change.
The new agenda includes efforts to develop new climate
ready varieties of corn, wheat, rice and sorghum, as well as
programs to encourage more efficient use of water and soil
resources and to develop new practices to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions from farming.
The size of the task should not be underestimated, said
Robert Zeigler, director general of the International Rice
Research Institute, a CGIAR member institute.
Experts estimate food production must be doubled over the
next 25 years to feed the world’s growing population, Zeigler
said, a challenge in the best case scenario.
Irrigated rice paddies in Nicaragua depend on a steady
flow of water. (Photo courtesy Gerald
Urquhart) “Now poor countries must do so in
harsh environments that climate change has rendered far less
suitable to agriculture,” said Zeigler, who urged the
affiliates of CGIAR to rally around the climate issue.
Two members of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change, IPCC, told attendees at Monday’s opening
session that the world is already feeling the effects of
human-induced global warming.
“Climate change is already happening,” said Cynthia
Rosenzweig, an IPCC member and head of the Climate Impacts
Group at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. “Many
agricultural regions have already warmed … and we are
beginning to see that these warmer temperatures are
suppressing yields.”
“We are going to have to adapt - we are not going to be
able to mitigate our way out of this,” warned Martin Parry, an
IPCC panelist and director of the Jackson Environmental
Institute at the University of East Anglia.
There is already at least one degree Celsius of additional
warming in the climate system, Parry said, “even if we cut
emissions off at the knees tomorrow.”
The impacts on agriculture from climate change will vary,
Rosenzweig said, as regions across the world experience less
predictable rainfall, longer and more severe drought, and more
intense storms.
Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig is a research scientist at the NASA
Goddard Institute for Space Studies based at Columbia
University in New York. (Photo courtesy Columbia)
Over the long term, warming “presents a very
negative pressure on crop production,” said Rosenzweig, who
encouraged CGIAR to hone research efforts at the regional
level.
The alliance is well suited to follow such a path, Zeigler
said. CGIAR affiliates are involved in efforts to develop new
strains of maize for drought prone regions and new rice
strains that can tolerate prolonged heavy rainfall and
flooding are already being used by Asian farmers.
But there are limits to the ability of new varieties to
counteract the effects of heat, drought, and more intense
precipitation, Zeigler cautioned.
"Adaptation does not guarantee that farming will be able to
continue in an area, or if it does, that farmer income will
remain unchanged," he said. "Some adaptation will involve
shifting production from one location to another."
Efforts to improve the capture and storage of rainwater are
critical, he said, as are programs to encourage more efficient
farming techniques.
Rainwater harvesting collection jars at a farm in Nepal
(Photo courtesy NEWAH) Better farming practices
will not just help farmers in the developing world adapt to
climate change, Zeigler added, but will also aid efforts to
curb agricultural greenhouse gas emissions.
Agriculture contributes some 20 percent of human-made
emissions of greenhouse gases.
But low-till or zero-till farming can help keep carbon in
the soil, and more targeted application of nitrogen fertilizer
can curb emission of nitrous oxide - a greenhouse gas 310
times more potent than the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.
Parry, however, urged CGIAR to focus largely on the food
security side of the agricultural equation.
“Agriculture as a source of greenhouse gas emissions is not
the main issue,” Parry told attendees. “The main issue
confronting agriculture is how to respond, how to adapt and
how to be more resilient.” |