By 2050, 25 million more children will go hungry as climate change leads to food crisis, says the highly respected International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington, D.C. IFPRI, however, incorrectly links the prediction and the solutions, to man-made global warming. The food challenge will occur whether the warming is man-made or part of a natural cycle.
By 2050, the world will probably have 8 billion to 9 billion people, up from the current 6.5 billion — as the final surge of human population growth ends. Trade and technology will increase per capita incomes and more demand for grain, meat and milk will follow. Plus, rich people have fewer kids, but millions more companion cats and dogs. Taken together, more than two times as much food will be needed. The good news is that global warming now doesn’t sound so scary.
Global temperatures have lately been rising at 1.4 C per century, not the awful 3.9 C predicted by some global climate models. And, rising CO2 has already delivered most of its potential climate forcing.
Contrary to computer predictions, the earth has been cooling for seven years now, and the Pacific Ocean forecasts another 25 years of cooling. Sea levels have been rising at the “normal,” eight inches per century, with no significant rise at all in the last four years. Polar sea ice has been roughly stable over the past 30 years.
The bad news is that even the modest warming forecast by the natural 1,500-year Dansgaard-Oeschger climate cycle — 0.5 C — will apparently produce major drought problems, especially in the heavily populated tropics. The tropical rain-belts have moved about 300 miles north since 1600. Meanwhile, Oxfam reports that the 23 million people in Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and Uganda — being left behind by the rain shift — are currently threatened with drought and hunger.
There will also be extended droughts in unusual places as the Modern Warming continues. California had two century-long droughts during the Medieval Warming (A.D. 950-1300). A cave stalagmite in West Virginia records seven century-long mid-Atlantic droughts over 7,000 years — all during natural global warmings.
One of the secrets of the Roman Empire was the massive amount of wheat North Africa could grow as the Sahara became wetter. Most of it sailed across the Mediterranean to Rome. When the tropic rain-belts moved back south in the Dark Ages, however, the Roman Empire collapsed. Coincidence? The Mayans also thrived during the Roman Warming and their empire also collapsed after the rain-belt shift into the cold Dark Ages brought extended drought to Central America.
Will the corn growers of Kenya and the yam farmers of West Africa have to go on extended food aid as the rain-belts move north again to the Sahara? They could walk to the cities and eat food imported from newly productive counties such as Canada and Siberia — if there were jobs in their cities
Canada and Siberia will get warmer and wetter, but farmers there aren’t ready to begin supplying more food. Russia gave up on Siberian grain after Khrushchev’s massive crop failures in the 1950s. Canada’s farms are thriving, but would need extra farm machinery, storage and rail capacity.
Are we preparing for the wrong emergencies? It looks like we’ll need much higher crop yields — and far more food trade — to protect the world’s children in the coming centuries.
Resources:
Climate Change and Agriculture, Gerald Nelson, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, D.C. Jan. 29, 2009.
Ayisha Yahya, “Are the deserts getting greener?” BBC News, July 16, 2009.
“Tropical Rainfall Moving North,” LiveScience, Fox News.com, July 2, 2009.
Scott Stine, “The Great Droughts of Y1K,” Sierra Nature Notes, May 1, 2001.
West Virginia’s century-long droughts: Gregory Springer et al, “Solar Forcing of Holocene Droughts,” Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 35, 2008.
•••
This commentary was submitted by Dennis Avery, a senior fellow for the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C., and the director for the Center for Global Food Issues. He was formerly a senior analyst for the Department of State. Readers may write him at P.O. Box 202, Churchville, VA 24421 or e-mail to cgfi@hughes.net.
In 2008, Dan Mathews, vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said, "when you consider any movement for social change, it's really got to be seen as a generational one.
"If we as eaters insist on food being a smaller and smaller percentage of our spendable income by continuing to separate ourselves from the source of that food, it will become a race to the bottom for agriculture, for rural communities, and for everyone's quality of life."
Agriculture is a dynamic industry full of growth and change, and yet unlike many other industries, it remains blessed with an abundance of small family-run businesses.
As Obama’s energy taxes force reductions in coal and oil production, the price of U.S. energy will double and triple — and so will the costs of the things we buy.
The cost of the “free wind”? Projections are about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour — far higher than other energy sources. One of my neighbors has just invested $100,000 in a wind turbine. I think he’s wasted his money — and some of yours.
The earthquake in Haiti was a devastating blow — but we don’t know how to prevent earthquakes. On the other hand, we do know how to prevent 500,000 kids from going blind every year, and even dying, due to severe Vitamin A deficiency. But we’re not preventing the blindness or the deaths.
It is increasingly important to remember that almost any human activity of any size or consequence will have both negative and positive externalities. Perhaps the reason for little acknowledgment of the positive externalities is that they are the raison d’être for the activity in the first place.
The USDA seems to expect serious climate-related farming problems ahead, but the recent changes in global climate have been tiny — and in the “wrong” direction.
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Commentary: Drought the real, unstoppable danger
Originally published in the November 27, 2009, print edition.
By 2050, 25 million more children will go hungry as climate change leads to food crisis, says the highly respected International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington, D.C. IFPRI, however, incorrectly links the prediction and the solutions, to man-made global warming. The food challenge will occur whether the warming is man-made or part of a natural cycle.
By 2050, the world will probably have 8 billion to 9 billion people, up from the current 6.5 billion — as the final surge of human population growth ends. Trade and technology will increase per capita incomes and more demand for grain, meat and milk will follow. Plus, rich people have fewer kids, but millions more companion cats and dogs. Taken together, more than two times as much food will be needed. The good news is that global warming now doesn’t sound so scary.
Global temperatures have lately been rising at 1.4 C per century, not the awful 3.9 C predicted by some global climate models. And, rising CO2 has already delivered most of its potential climate forcing.
Contrary to computer predictions, the earth has been cooling for seven years now, and the Pacific Ocean forecasts another 25 years of cooling. Sea levels have been rising at the “normal,” eight inches per century, with no significant rise at all in the last four years. Polar sea ice has been roughly stable over the past 30 years.
The bad news is that even the modest warming forecast by the natural 1,500-year Dansgaard-Oeschger climate cycle — 0.5 C — will apparently produce major drought problems, especially in the heavily populated tropics. The tropical rain-belts have moved about 300 miles north since 1600. Meanwhile, Oxfam reports that the 23 million people in Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and Uganda — being left behind by the rain shift — are currently threatened with drought and hunger.
There will also be extended droughts in unusual places as the Modern Warming continues. California had two century-long droughts during the Medieval Warming (A.D. 950-1300). A cave stalagmite in West Virginia records seven century-long mid-Atlantic droughts over 7,000 years — all during natural global warmings.
One of the secrets of the Roman Empire was the massive amount of wheat North Africa could grow as the Sahara became wetter. Most of it sailed across the Mediterranean to Rome. When the tropic rain-belts moved back south in the Dark Ages, however, the Roman Empire collapsed. Coincidence? The Mayans also thrived during the Roman Warming and their empire also collapsed after the rain-belt shift into the cold Dark Ages brought extended drought to Central America.
Will the corn growers of Kenya and the yam farmers of West Africa have to go on extended food aid as the rain-belts move north again to the Sahara? They could walk to the cities and eat food imported from newly productive counties such as Canada and Siberia — if there were jobs in their cities
Canada and Siberia will get warmer and wetter, but farmers there aren’t ready to begin supplying more food. Russia gave up on Siberian grain after Khrushchev’s massive crop failures in the 1950s. Canada’s farms are thriving, but would need extra farm machinery, storage and rail capacity.
Are we preparing for the wrong emergencies? It looks like we’ll need much higher crop yields — and far more food trade — to protect the world’s children in the coming centuries.
Resources:
Climate Change and Agriculture, Gerald Nelson, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, D.C. Jan. 29, 2009.
Ayisha Yahya, “Are the deserts getting greener?” BBC News, July 16, 2009.
“Tropical Rainfall Moving North,” LiveScience, Fox News.com, July 2, 2009.
Scott Stine, “The Great Droughts of Y1K,” Sierra Nature Notes, May 1, 2001.
West Virginia’s century-long droughts: Gregory Springer et al, “Solar Forcing of Holocene Droughts,” Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 35, 2008.
This commentary was submitted by Dennis Avery, a senior fellow for the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C., and the director for the Center for Global Food Issues. He was formerly a senior analyst for the Department of State. Readers may write him at P.O. Box 202, Churchville, VA 24421 or e-mail to cgfi@hughes.net.
In 2008, Dan Mathews, vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said, "when you consider any movement for social change, it's really got to be seen as a generational one.
June 18, 2010
Biologists are again predicting massive species losses as the world warms. But where are the corpses?
June 18, 2010
"If we as eaters insist on food being a smaller and smaller percentage of our spendable income by continuing to separate ourselves from the source of that food, it will become a race to the bottom for agriculture, for rural communities, and for everyone's quality of life."
May 21, 2010
Agriculture is a dynamic industry full of growth and change, and yet unlike many other industries, it remains blessed with an abundance of small family-run businesses.
April 8, 2010
As Obama’s energy taxes force reductions in coal and oil production, the price of U.S. energy will double and triple — and so will the costs of the things we buy.
April 8, 2010
The cost of the “free wind”? Projections are about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour — far higher than other energy sources. One of my neighbors has just invested $100,000 in a wind turbine. I think he’s wasted his money — and some of yours.
February 26, 2010
The earthquake in Haiti was a devastating blow — but we don’t know how to prevent earthquakes. On the other hand, we do know how to prevent 500,000 kids from going blind every year, and even dying, due to severe Vitamin A deficiency. But we’re not preventing the blindness or the deaths.
February 12, 2010
Public deserves science-driven review of pesticide’s health, environmental impacts.
January 29, 2010
It is increasingly important to remember that almost any human activity of any size or consequence will have both negative and positive externalities. Perhaps the reason for little acknowledgment of the positive externalities is that they are the raison d’être for the activity in the first place.
January 29, 2010
The USDA seems to expect serious climate-related farming problems ahead, but the recent changes in global climate have been tiny — and in the “wrong” direction.
January 29, 2010
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