AI Article Synopsis

  • The risk of disruptions in national food supply is influenced by both local production and imports, yet most assessments overlook the climate effects on producing regions.
  • Using global crop modeling and current trade flows, the study compares domestic production impacts to broader consumption impacts that include climate effects from all supplying regions.
  • The findings indicate that climate change exacerbates supply risks for wealthier countries while potentially mitigating risks for lower-income nations, highlighting the critical need for a global perspective in food security strategies.

Article Abstract

The risk of national food supply disruptions is linked to both domestic production and food imports. But assessments of climate change risks for food systems typically focus on the impacts on domestic production, ignoring climate impacts in supplying regions. Here, we use global crop modeling data in combination with current trade flows to evaluate potential climate change impacts on national food supply, comparing impacts on domestic production alone (domestic production impacts) to impacts considering how climate change impacts production in all source regions (consumption impact). Under 2°C additional global mean warming over present day, our analysis highlights that climate impacts on national supply are aggravated for 53% high income and 56% upper medium income countries and mitigated for 60% low- and 71% low-medium income countries under consumption-based impacts compared to domestic impacts alone. We find that many countries are reliant on a few mega-exporters who mediate these climate impacts. Managing the risk of climate change for national food security requires a global perspective, considering not only how national production is affected, but also how climate change affects trading partners.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11698460PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0314722PLOS

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