-
Scandic Trust Group strengthens sales network with First Idea Consultant
-
Police say 19 held after raid at Swedish start-up Stegra to be deported
-
Kante returns as France seek to clinch World Cup berth
-
Marcus Smith starts at full-back as England ring changes for Fiji
-
Kolisi 100th Test 'no distraction' for Erasmus' South Africa
-
Teetering Belgian government given more time to agree budget
-
Merz backs EU plan to protect steel sector from Chinese imports
-
New Zealand make Scotland changes after Barrett brothers' injuries
-
'Roy of the Rovers story' -- Farrell handed Ireland debut for Japan Test
-
Stones backs Man City team-mate Foden to pose England dilemma for Tuchel
-
Djokovic to face Alcaraz in ATP Finals groups
-
Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory
-
Springbok skipper Kolisi to play 100th Test against France
-
Typhoon Kalmaegi hits Vietnam after killing 140 in Philippines
-
Bank of England leaves rate unchanged before UK budget
-
Germany recall Sane, hand El Mala debut for World Cup qualifers
-
India thump Australia to take 2-1 lead in T20 series
-
Cameroon's Biya, world's oldest president, sworn in for 8th term
-
Flick holding firm on Barca high line despite defensive woes
-
Battered US businesses eye improved China trade at Shanghai expo
-
France opt for Le Garrec as Dupont replacement for 'best team ever' South Africa
-
Drugmaker AstraZeneca profit jumps as US business grows
-
'Vibe coding' named word of the year by Collins dictionary
-
Vietnam evacuates thousands from coast ahead of Typhoon Kalmaegi
-
European stocks fall after gains in Asia, US
-
MotoGP legend Agostini admires Marc Marquez's 'desire to win'
-
Nepal searches for avalanche victims
-
Hezbollah rejects any negotiations between Lebanon and Israel
-
Chapman blitz leads Black Caps to tight T20 victory over West Indies
-
France urges EU to sanction Shein platform
-
France opt for Le Garrec as Dupont replacement for South Africa Test
-
Turmoil in tiaras at Miss Universe pageant in Thailand
-
Probe into Thales defence group looking at Indonesian contract
-
US to cancel flights as longest govt shutdown drags on
-
Home in Nigeria, ex-refugees find themselves in a war zone
-
Doncic's Lakers hold off Wembanyama's Spurs, Blazers silence Thunder
-
For Turkey's LGBTQ community, draft law sparks existential alarm
-
Musk's $1 trillion pay package to face Tesla shareholder vote
-
Tonga rugby league star out of intensive care after seizure
-
Argentine ex-president Kirchner goes on trial in new corruption case
-
Dams, housing, pensions: Franco disinformation flourishes online
-
Endo returns as Japan look to build on Brazil win
-
Franco captivates young Spaniards 50 years after death
-
German steel industry girds for uncertain future
-
IPL champions Bengaluru could be sold for 'as much as $2 billion'
-
Budget impasse threatens Belgium's ruling coalition
-
New Zealand ex-top cop admits to having material showing child abuse, bestiality
-
BoE set for finely balanced pre-budget rate call
-
Australian kingpin obtains shorter sentence over drug charge
-
Weatherald's unenviable Ashes task: fill giant hole at top left by Warner
Climate change could cut crop yields up to a quarter
Climate change is on track to reduce by 11 percent in 2100 the yields that today provide two-thirds of humanity's calories from crops, even taking into account adaptation to a warming world, scientists said Wednesday.
As soon as 2050, this "moderate" scenario in which greenhouse gas emissions peak around 2040 and slowly taper off -- a trajectory aligned with current trends -- would see global losses of nearly eight percent.
And if carbon pollution worsens, the loss of calories across the same six staples -- corn, wheat, rice, soybeans, sorghum and cassava -- rises to nearly a quarter by century's end, the researchers reported in Nature.
More generally, every additional degree Celsius of warming reduces the world's ability to produce food from these crops by 120 calories per person per day, or nearly five percent of current daily consumption, they calculated.
"If the climate warms by three degrees, that's basically like everyone on the planet giving up breakfast," said co-author Solomon Hsiang, a professor at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability in California.
The steepest losses will occur at the extremes of the agricultural economy: in modern, Big Ag breadbaskets that currently enjoy some of the world's best growing conditions, and in subsistence farming communities that typically rely of small cassava harvests.
North America would be hit hardest, losing a fifth of yields by 2100 in the moderate carbon pollution scenario, and two-fifths if emissions from burning fossil fuels continue apace.
Working with more than a dozen scientists, Hsiang and co-leader Andrew Hultgren, an assistant professor at the University of Urbana-Champaign, sifted through data from more than 12,000 regions in 55 countries.
- Erratic weather -
Previous calculations of how a warming world will impact crop yields generally failed to consider the ways in which farmers would adapt, such as switching crop varieties, shifting planting and harvesting dates, and altering fertiliser use.
The scientists estimated such adjustments would offset about a third of climate related losses over the next 75 years in the scenario of rising emissions, but that residual impacts would still be devastating.
"Any level of warming, even when accounting for adaptation, results in global output losses for agriculture," said Hultgren.
With the planet about 1.5C hotter than preindustrial levels in the late 1900s, farmers in many regions are already experiencing longer dry spells, unseasonable heatwaves and erratic weather that undermines yields.
The nutritional value of most crops also declines with hotter temperatures, earlier research has shown.
The study revealed sharp variations in the impact of global warming on different crops and regions.
In the "worst-case" scenario of rising carbon emissions, corn yields would plummet 40 percent by 2100 across the grain belt of the United States, eastern China, central Asia, and the Middle East.
For soybeans, yields in the US would decline by half, and increase by a fifth in Brazil.
Wheat losses would drop by a fifth in eastern and western Europe, and by 30 to 40 percent in other wheat-growing regions: China, Russia and North America.
Cassava would be hit hard everywhere it's grown.
"Although cassava does not make up a large portion of global agricultural revenues, it is an important subsistence crop in low- and middle-income countries," the researchers pointed out.
Among the six crops examined, rice is the only one that stands to benefit in a warmer climate, mainly due to warmer nights.
P.Silva--AMWN