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Global Warming To Starve The World By 2100

By the year 2100, the lowest growing-season temperatures in the tropics and subtropics will be higher than any temperatures recorded there to date, as estimated by the researchers. "The stresses on global food production from temperature alone are going to be huge, and that doesn''t take into account water supplies stressed by the higher temperatures," said David Battisti, a University of Washington atmospheric sciences professor.
"This
is
a
compelling
reason
for
us
to
invest
in
adaptation,
because
it
is
clear
that
this
is
the
direction
we
are
going
in
terms
of
temperature
and
it
will
take
decades
to
develop
new
food
crop
varieties
that
can
better
withstand
a
warmer
climate.
"We are taking the worst of what we''ve seen historically and saying that in the future it is going to be a lot worse unless there is some kind of adaptation," he added. For the study, direct observations with 23 global climate models were combined, these are a part of the 2007 Nobel prize winning research. The data collected was used to the severe food insecurities in the future. It was also concluded that such instances would become a common happenings soon.
The study included severe episodes in France in 2003 and the Ukraine in 1972. In the case of the Ukraine, a near-record heat wave reduced wheat yields and contributed to disruptions in the global cereal market that lasted two years.
However, the scientists have also cautioned that the severely affected ares are not only the tropics, example being the temperatures that struck Western Europe in June, July and August of 2003, killing an estimated 52,000 people.
France and Italy faced reduction in crop yield by one-thirds, due to the summer-long heat wave. The temperatures shot up to 6.5 degrees Fahrenheit above the long-term mean, according to the scientists this could be a normal temperature for France in 2100.
The tropic will face reduction in the crop-yield by 20 to 40 percent, main effected food crops being the maize and rice. The raising temperatures will also render the soil dry and reducing the yield all the more.
"We have to be rethinking agriculture systems as a whole, not only thinking about new varieties but also recognizing that many people will just move out of agriculture, and even move from the lands where they live now," Naylor said.
Equatorial
regions
will
experience
more
of
increased
temperature
due
to
climatic
changes
as
compared
to
higher
latitudes.
Since
the
Tropics
have
an
average
temperatures
much
higher
than
the
average
as
compared
to
the
midlattitudes,
crop
yields
will
be
more
severely
affected
in
the
tropics.
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