Agriculture, bioenergy, and water implications of constrained cereal trade and climate change impacts

被引:0
|
作者
Zhang, Ying [1 ]
Waldhoff, Stephanie [1 ]
Wise, Marshall [1 ]
Edmonds, Jae [1 ]
Patel, Pralit [1 ]
机构
[1] Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Joint Global Change Res Inst, College Pk, MD 20740 USA
来源
PLOS ONE | 2023年 / 18卷 / 09期
关键词
ENVIRONMENTAL-MODEL HADGEM1; FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; DEFORESTATION; ATMOSPHERE; SECURITY; RISKS;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0291577
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
International trade increases connections and dependencies between countries, weaving a network of global supply chains. Agricultural commodity trade has implications for crop producers, consumers, crop prices, water and land uses, and other human systems. Interconnections among these systems are not always easy to observe when external impacts penetrate across multiple sectors. To better understand the interactions of non-linear and globally coupled agricultural-bioenergy-water systems under the broader economy, we introduce systematic perturbations in two dimensions, one human (restrictions on agricultural trade) and the other physical (climate impacts on crop yields). We explore these independently and in combination to distinguish the consequences of individual perturbation and interactive effects in long-term projections. We show that most regions experience larger changes in cereal consumption due to cereal import dependency constraints than due to the impacts of climate change on agricultural yields. In the scenario where all regions ensure an import dependency ratio of zero, the global trade of cereals decreases similar to 50% in 2050 compared to the baseline, with smaller decreases in cereal production and consumption (4%). The changes in trade also impact water and bioenergy: global irrigation water consumption increases 3% and corn ethanol production decreases 7% in 2050. Climate change results in rising domestic prices and declining consumption of cereal crops in general, while the import dependency constraint exacerbates the situation in regions which import more cereals in the baseline. The individual and interactive effects of trade perturbations and climate change vary greatly across regions, which are also affected by the regional ability to increase agricultural production through intensification or extensification.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] International Cereal Trade of Bangladesh: Implications for Virtual Land, Water, and GHG Emissions from Agriculture
    Udmale, Parmeshwar
    Pal, Indrajit
    Szabo, Sylvia
    Pramanik, Malay
    INTERNATIONAL ENERGY JOURNAL, 2021, 21 : 107 - 118
  • [22] CLIMATE CHANGE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR AGRICULTURE IN NIGER
    SIVAKUMAR, MVK
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 1992, 20 (04) : 297 - 312
  • [23] Climate impacts on agriculture: Implications for crop management
    Hatfield, J. L.
    PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2010, 100 (06) : S179 - S179
  • [24] Climate Impacts on Agriculture: Implications for Crop Production
    Hatfield, J. L.
    Boote, K. J.
    Kimball, B. A.
    Ziska, L. H.
    Izaurralde, R. C.
    Ort, D.
    Thomson, A. M.
    Wolfe, D.
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 2011, 103 (02) : 351 - 370
  • [25] Issues in the Impacts of Climate Variability and Change on Agriculture
    Linda O. Mearns
    Climatic Change, 2003, 60 : 1 - 6
  • [26] Impacts of climate change on exposures linked to agriculture
    Nicolle-Mir, Laurence
    ENVIRONNEMENT RISQUES & SANTE, 2009, 8 (06): : 474 - 475
  • [27] Impacts of climate change mitigation on agriculture water use: A provincial analysis in China
    Guo, Chaoyi
    Dai, Hancheng
    Liu, Xiaorui
    Wu, Yazhen
    Liu, Xiaoyu
    Liu, Yong
    GEOGRAPHY AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 1 (03) : 189 - 199
  • [28] Reassessing Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture in China
    Liu, Jie
    Liu, Changyi
    Wen, Yan
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF URBAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, 2015, 3 (02)
  • [29] Economic impacts of climate change on California agriculture
    Olivier Deschenes
    Charles Kolstad
    Climatic Change, 2011, 109 : 365 - 386
  • [30] Economic impacts of climate change on California agriculture
    Deschenes, Olivier
    Kolstad, Charles
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2011, 109 : 365 - 386