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Related: About this forumClimate change and the food supply: it’s not going to get any easier
On Saturday morning at the AAAS Meeting in Vancouver, scientists were talking about the implications of a warming world. As part of one symposium called Make it Fit, looking at how to support a decent standard of living for our planets growing population, I caught a talk from economist Michael Hanemann about how water demands will shift due to climate change. Already, he said, there are 2.8 million deaths per year due to contaminated water. But scarcity isnt the main problem; access is, and that requires plumbing to bring the water to people, which can be expensive.Climate change is expected to cause more intense episodes of precipitation, Hanemann noted, which will require better ways to store the water when it falls, but that costs even more money. In California, he said, most precipitation happens in the winter, but three-quarters of water use happens in the summertime; snow is an important way to store it through winter months, saving about one-third of precipitation for use later on. But as the climate warms, and rain falls instead of snow, that will changenot just in California, but in Canada too, of course.
After that came a fascinating briefing from four experts on the emerging risks to the global food system. Wolfram Schlenkerpointed out that corn, wheat, rice and soy make up 75 per cent of our calories, but these crops
above 30C. Thanks to modern farming methods, yields have increased threefold over the last fifty years, he saidbut their sensitivity to heat remains about the same. As climate change continues, that will have some serious implications for our food supply, as will changing lifestyles in developing countries and the growing number of people consuming higher-calorie diets and more red meat, which will also squeeze the food supply. Any climate change, he said, will have a really significant impact worldwide.
More: http://www2.macleans.ca/2012/02/18/climate-change-and-the-food-supply-its-not-going-to-get-any-easier/
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Climate change and the food supply: it’s not going to get any easier (Original Post)
Dead_Parrot
Feb 2012
OP
OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)1. See also…
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)2. Good read, Parrot. Thank you.