Severe
'food shocks' more likely due to extreme weather,
experts warn
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[August 14, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Extreme weather such as
intense storms, droughts and heatwaves will cause more frequent and
severe food shortages as the global climate and food supply systems
change, British and American experts warned on Friday.
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The pressure on the world's food supplies is so great, and the
increase in extreme weather events so rapid, they said, that food
shortages on a scale likely to occur once a century under past
conditions, may in future hit as often as once every 30 years.
"The chance of having a weather-related food shock is increasing,
and the size of that shock is also increasing," said Tim Benton, a
professor of population ecology at Leeds University who presented a
report commissioned by the British government.
"And as these events become more frequent, the imperative for doing
something about it becomes even greater."
The report, prepared by the UK-US Taskforce on Extreme Weather and
Global Food System Resilience, also warned that knee-jerk national
responses to production drops, such as the imposition of export or
import bans on certain foods or crops, risk exacerbating a problem
and fuelling spikes in food prices.
"If you put the worst case institutional responses together with a
worst case production shock, that's when it starts spiralling out of
control," said Rob Bailey, research director for energy, environment
and resources at Britain's Chatham House think tank, the Royal
Institute of International Affairs.
The experts looked at production of the world's most important
commodity crops -- maize, soybean, wheat and rice -- and how
droughts, floods and storms might impact it in future.
Since most of the global production of these four crops comes from a
small number of countries such as China, the United States and
India, extreme weather events in these regions will have the largest
impact on global food supplies, they said.
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And while greater interconnectedness reduces countries’
vulnerability to local production shocks, it may also perversely
increase vulnerability to large shocks in distant so-called
"breadbasket" regions.
The report recommended drawing up international contingency plans,
developing better modeling methods to accurately predict the effects
of falls in supply, and identifying international trading ‘pinch
points’ to try and minimize them.
It also said agriculture should do more to adapt to a changing
climate and become more resilient in the face of extreme weather,
while at the same time increasing productivity to meet an increasing
global demand for food.
(Editing by Clelia Oziel)
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