Climate change risks pushing one-third of global food production outside the safe climatic space.

IF 15.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Matti Kummu, Matias Heino, Maija Taka, Olli Varis, Daniel Viviroli
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引用次数: 42

Abstract

Food production on our planet is dominantly based on agricultural practices developed during stable Holocene climatic conditions. Although it is widely accepted that climate change perturbs these conditions, no systematic understanding exists on where and how the major risks for entering unprecedented conditions may occur. Here, we address this gap by introducing the concept of safe climatic space (SCS), which incorporates the decisive climatic factors of agricultural production: precipitation, temperature, and aridity. We show that a rapid and unhalted growth of greenhouse gas emissions (SSP5-8.5) could force 31% of the global food crop and 34% of livestock production beyond the SCS by 2081-2100. The most vulnerable areas are South and Southeast Asia and Africa's Sudano-Sahelian Zone, which have low resilience to cope with these changes. Our results underpin the importance of committing to a low-emissions scenario (SSP1-2.6), whereupon the extent of food production facing unprecedented conditions would be a fraction.

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气候变化有可能将全球三分之一的粮食生产推到安全气候空间之外。
地球上的粮食生产主要基于稳定的全新世气候条件下发展起来的农业实践。虽然人们普遍认为气候变化扰乱了这些条件,但对于进入前所未有的条件的主要风险可能在哪里以及如何发生,还没有系统的认识。在这里,我们通过引入安全气候空间(SCS)的概念来解决这一差距,该概念包含了农业生产的决定性气候因素:降水、温度和干旱。我们表明,到2081-2100年,温室气体排放(SSP5-8.5)的快速和不间断增长可能迫使全球31%的粮食作物和34%的牲畜生产超出南海。最脆弱的地区是南亚和东南亚以及非洲的苏丹-萨赫勒地区,这些地区应对这些变化的韧性较低。我们的研究结果支持了致力于低排放情景(SSP1-2.6)的重要性,在这种情况下,粮食生产面临前所未有条件的程度将是一个零头。
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来源期刊
One Earth
One Earth Environmental Science-Environmental Science (all)
CiteScore
18.90
自引率
1.90%
发文量
159
期刊介绍: One Earth, Cell Press' flagship sustainability journal, serves as a platform for high-quality research and perspectives that contribute to a deeper understanding and resolution of contemporary sustainability challenges. With monthly thematic issues, the journal aims to bridge gaps between natural, social, and applied sciences, along with the humanities. One Earth fosters the cross-pollination of ideas, inspiring transformative research to address the complexities of sustainability.
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