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CLIMATE CHANGE AND FOOD SYSTEMS Global assessments and implications for food security and trade Edited by Aziz Elbehri FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS ROME, 2015 Recommended citation: FAO 2015. Climate change and food systems: global assessments and implications for food security and trade. Food Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) The designations employed and the presentation of material in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) concerning the legal or development status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The mention of specific companies or products of manufacturers, whether or not these have been patented, does not imply that these have been endorsed or recommended by FAO in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. The views expressed in this information product are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of FAO. ISBN 978-92-5-108699-5 © FAO, 2015 FAO encourages the use, reproduction and dissemination of material in this information product. Except where otherwise indicated, material may be copied, downloaded and printed for private study, research and teaching purposes, or for use in non-commercial products or services, provided that appropriate acknowledgement of FAO as the source and copyright holder is given and that FAO’s endorsement of users’ views, products or services is not implied in any way. All requests for translation and adaptation rights, and for resale and other commercial use rights should be made via www.fao.org/contact-us/licence-request or addressed to [email protected]. FAO information products are available on the FAO website (www.fao.org/publications) and can be purchased through [email protected]. © Photo credits: biodilloversity.wordpress.com M. Sebastian Minden Pictures/Colin Monteath FAO/Truis Brekke Safeway-Tuna/1280 ii CONTENTS Contributing authors ix Forewordxi Prefacexiii Acronymsxv CCHAPTER 1 Climate change, food security and trade: An overview of global assessments and policy insights Aziz Elbehri, Joshua Elliott and Tim Wheeler 1 A. PART 1: Climate change impact modelling -current status and future direction 2 A1.Robust results from existing climate change impact studies A2. Current modelling challenges A3. Future research areas 2 6 7 B. PART 2: Critical issues at the interface of climate and food security 10 B1. Climate and nutrition: Improving analysis of climate-nutrition-health links B2. Climate and water: Growing need for systematic climate-food-water analysis B3. Climate mitigation and food security: Co-benefits versus trade-offs B4. Climate and trade: Understanding the trends and tackling trade-offs B5. Climate and poverty: Mainstreaming adaptation into development 10 11 12 13 14 C. PART 3: Policy messages, communication and the need for two-way science-policy dialogue 15 C1. Matching evidence on climate impacts to the needs of policy-makers C2. Policy insights on climate change impacts under uncertainty C3. Harmonizing climate and trade policy C4. Recommendations for structured science-policy dialogue 15 17 18 19 iii CCHAPTER 2 The Global Gridded Crop Model Intercomparison: Approaches, insights and caveats for modelling climate change impacts on agriculture at the global scale Christoph Müller and Joshua Elliott 28 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 7. 30 30 30 31 33 33 34 34 38 39 40 41 42 42 43 44 45 46 Rationale Biophysical models to assess climate change impacts on agricultural productivity 2.1 Crops and weather 2.2 Model types Challenges for global-scale modelling 3.1 Global consistency vs. data scarcity Recent advances in global-scale crop modelling 4.1 Global-scale impacts 4.2 Focus regions of climate change impacts 4.3 Inter-sectoral interaction The Global Gridded Crop Model intercomparison Open questions 6.1 Model evaluation and validation 6.2Management 6.3 Effects of elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations Future challenges: Representative agricultural pathways Future challenges: Drought and climate extremes Future challenges: Connecting with field-scale assessments Future challenges: Informing economic assessment with biophysical climate change impact studies Conclusions 46 47 CCHAPTER 3 Economic modelling of climate impacts and adaptation in agriculture: A survey of methods, results and gaps iv Aziz Elbehri and Mary Burfisher 60 1. Introduction 2. Defining climate adaptation: Analytical perspective 3. Global climate models 4. Pathway models 4.1 Crop yield models 4.2 Water-climate pathway models 4.3 Other pathway models 5. Economic models 5.1 Market- and sector-level models 5.2 Farm- and household-level models 6.Conclusions 62 63 66 71 71 76 79 80 80 89 CCHAPTER 4 An overview of climate change impact on crop production and its variability in Europe, related uncertainties and research challenges Reimund Rötter and Jukka Höhn 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Introduction 1.1 Background and objectives 1.2 Climate change projections for Europe Climate change impact assessment methodology for agriculture 2.1 Different approaches to assessment 2.2 Major shortcomings 2.3 Recent progress 2.4 Current use of crop simulation for assessing effects of climate and adaptation Selected impacts for key crops and regions 3.1 Production trends - past and near future projections 3.2 Future shifts in production possibilities (suitability) 3.3 Projections of relative crop yield change under future climate scenarios 3.4 Projections of future crop production potential (yields and suitability) 3.5 Potential implications for trade and food security Discussion of uncertainties Recommendations for improving impact assessment 106 108 108 109 113 113 116 118 119 121 121 123 123 129 130 132 134 CCHAPTER 5 Climate change impact on key crops in Africa: Using crop models and general equilibrium models to bound the predictions Timothy Thomas and Mark Rosegrant 1. 2. 3. 4. Introduction 1.1Population 1.2Income 1.3Agriculture Climate and climate models 2.1Precipitation 2.2Temperature DSSAT Crop Model Results 3.1 Rainfed maize 3.2 All crops Impact model results 4.1 Maize 4.2Sorghum 4.3 All crops 4.4Malnutrition 146 148 150 150 150 150 150 155 156 158 161 165 165 166 170 171 v CCHAPTER 6 Global climate change, food supply and livestock production systems: A bioeconomic analysis Petr Havlík, David Leclère, Hugo Valin, Mario Herrero, Erwin Schmid, Jean-Francois Soussana, Christoph Müller and Michael Obersteiner 176 1. Introduction 2. Methodology 2.1 Climate scenarios 2.2 Biophysical impact modelling 2.3 Economic impact modelling 3. Results 3.1 Livestock sector developments without climate change 3.2 Climate change impact on livestock markets 3.3 Land management adaptation 3.4 Livestock sector adaptation 4. Conclusions 178 179 179 180 183 187 187 190 193 195 196 CCHAPTER 7 Grain production trends in the Russian Federation, Ukraine and Kazakhstan in the context of climate change and international trade Elena Lioubimtseva, Nicolai Dronin and Andrei Kirilenko 210 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 212 218 213 215 210 222 229 Introduction Historical trends of grain production and trade 2.1 Decline in agriculture in 1991-2001 2.2 Recovery trends in 2002-2013 Short-term weather variability and land dynamics Impacts of climate change on grain production Outlooks for grain production and export Conclusions235 CCHAPTER 8 The potential impact of climate change-induced sea level rise on the global rice market and food security vi Ching-Cheng Chang, Huey-Lin Lee and Shih-Hsun Hsu 246 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 248 249 250 252 260 Introduction Model and data Simulation design Simulation results Conclusions CCHAPTER 9 An assessment of global banana production and suitability under climate change scenarios German Calberto, Charles Staver and Pablo Siles 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Introduction Climatic zones suitable for banana production Climate change impacts through 2070 on areas of climatic zones suitable for banana suitability Climate change productions for 24 banana-growing areas in Latin America, Africa and Asia Changes in potential productivity for 24 key banana-growing areas in Latin America, Africa and Asia for 2030, 2050 and 2070 5.1 Method to estimate banana GDD and TDU 5.2 Method to estimate water deficit in bananas 5.3 Results of calculations GDD, TDU and water deficit Changes in leaf diseases for six key banana-growing sites in Latin America, Africa and Asia for 2030, 2050, and 2070 Changes at the margins - potential areas lost and gained for banana production in 2030, 2050 and 2070 Implications of climate change for global banana production 264 266 267 268 270 275 275 280 280 281 285 288 CCHAPTER 10 The role of international trade under a changing climate: Insights from global economic modelling Helal Ahammad and colleagues 292 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 294 295 295 297 298 299 300 301 302 304 308 308 Introduction Modelling international trade 2.1 Modelling trade in a general equilibrium framework 2.2 Modelling trade in a partial equilibrium framework Trade in agricultural commodities: Recent trends Description of scenarios Implications for trade of the “socio-economic and climatic”scenarios 5.1 Agrifood trade in 2050 under scenario S1 5.2 Agrifood trade in 2050: A closer look at model agreement 5.3 Key drivers of trade: Degree of model agreement 5.4 Production-exports nexus: degree of model agreement Discussion and conclusions vii CCHAPTER 11 Climate change impacts on food systems and implications for climate-compatible food policies Tim Wheeler 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. viii Introduction Climate change Climate variability and agriculture Impacts of climate change on food availability 4.1 Global studies of impacts on crop production and yield 4.2 Local, national and regional studies of impacts on crop production and yield Impacts on food access, utilization and stability Mitigation and adaptation in the agricultural sector Understanding and working with uncertainty about climate change impacts on food security Towards climate-compatible food policies Conclusions 314 316 317 318 319 321 322 323 326 328 330 330 CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS Helal AHAMMAD Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences Mario HERRERO Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Australia Elodie BLANC Massachusetts Institute of Technology Edwina HEYHOE Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences Mary BURFISHER United States Naval Academy and Purdue University Jukka HÖHN Plant Production Research, MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Finland German CALBERTO Bioversity International, Cali, Colombia and CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) Shih-Hsun HSU Department of Agricultural Economics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan Ching-Cheng CHANG Institute of Economics, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan Andrei KIRILENKO Department of Earth System Science and Policy, University of North Dakota, USA Daniel Mason D’CROZ International Food Policy Research Institute Page KYLE Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Nicolai DRONIN School of Geography, Moscow State University, Russia David LECLÈRE International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Aziz ELBEHRI Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Huey-Lin LEE Department of Economics, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan Joshua ELLIOTT University of Chicago Computation Institute, USA Elena LIOUBIMTSEVA Geography and Planning Department, Grand Valley State University, Michigan, USA Shinichiro FUJIMORI National Institute for Environmental Studies Tomoko HASEGAWA National Institute for Environmental Studies Petr HAVLIK International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Herman LOTZE-CAMPEN Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany Christoph MÜLLER Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany Gerald NELSON University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ix Michael OBERSTEINER International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Mark ROSEGRANT International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Andrzej TABEAU LEI Part of Wageningen University; Reimund RÖTTER Plant Production Research, MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Findand Timothy THOMAS International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Ronald SANDS U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service Hugo VALIN International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Erwin SCHMID University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria Hans VAN MEIJL LEI Part of Wageningen University; Christoph SCHMITZ Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany Pablo SILES CIAT, Nicaragua (previously Bioversity International, Turrialba, Costa Rica) Jean-Francois SOUSSANA French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA), Paris, France x Charles STAVER Bioversity International, Montpellier, France and CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) Dominique VAN DER MENSBRUGGHE HE Global Analysis Project, Purdue University; Martin VON LAMPE Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Tim WHEELER Department of Agriculture, University of Reading, United Kingdom FOREWORD T he growing threat of climate change to the global food supply, and the challenges it poses for food security and nutrition, requires urgent concerted policy responses and the deployment of all the scientific knowledge and accumulated evidence at our disposal. It also requires a sharper focus on the important drivers of climate adaptation, including the potential role of trade to mitigate some of the negative impacts of climate change on global food production. Knowledge of climate change impacts on agriculture has significantly expanded over the past 20 years. Convergent results are showing that climate change will fundamentally alter global food production patterns. Crop productivity impacts are expected to be negative in lowlatitude and tropical regions but somewhat positive in high-latitude regions. Adverse climate impacts on health, including through malnutrition, are gaining increased attention. Higher carbon dioxide concentration [CO2] is shown to lower concentrations of zinc, iron and protein and raise starch and sugar content in crop plants that use three-carbon (C3) fixation pathway such as wheat, rice and soybeans. These findings exacerbate the malnutrition challenges, including obesity and nutrition deficits in poor communities. Since water mediates much of the climate change impacts on agriculture, increased water scarcity in many regions of the world presents a major challenge for climate adaptation. Addressing the implications of future water availability for food security is paramount and requires coherent cross-sectoral, national and regional strategies that address water management supply and demand. Marketbased instruments (water pricing, water trading) could enhance efficient water use and improve water demand management. However, strong institutional structures are also required to ensure people’s rightful access to this indispensable and geographically bound resource. Climate change mitigation measures that affect food security involve emission reductions from many sources. Several technologies targeting adaptation can also have mitigation co-benefits. At the same time, many technologies critical for food security present dilemmas and trade-offs in climate mitigation. Current crop-based biofuels contribute to mitigation as a renewable energy, but can exacerbate emissions through indirect land use change (e.g. deforestation). Nitrogen fertilizer – a critical input for agricultural productivity – also presents trade-offs between food production and climate mitigation. A win-win solution requires ensuring that fertilizer is accessible to farmers through efficient delivery technologies, but that its use is reduced without negatively affecting yields or exacerbating greenhouse gas emissions. Climate impact assessments strongly indicate that trade will probably expand from the mid- to high-latitude regions to the low-latitude regions, where production and export potential could be reduced. At the same time, more frequent extreme weather patterns can also adversely impact trade by disrupting transportation, supply chains and logistics. While global markets can play a stabilizing role for prices and supplies, and provide alternative food options for regions negatively impacted by changing conditions, trade alone is not a sufficient adaptation strategy. Trade requires a balance with a domestic adaptation strategy that avoids too much dependence on imports, which may increase a country’s risk of and exposure to higher market and price volatility expected under climate change. Trade policy plays an important role in affecting future trade flow patterns. Progress on climatecompatible trade policies requires ensuring that climate measures do not distort trade and, alternatively, that trade rules do not prevent xi progress on climate change. In the longer term, trade rules should evolve to allow internalization of the cost of carbon to avoid negatively affecting climate change mitigation. Likewise, future climate change mitigation policies should include measures designed to internalize the environmental costs of resources. Combatting climate change must go hand in hand with alleviating poverty. Adverse effects of climate change are greater among poor people in developing countries who are highly dependent on climate-sensitive natural resources yet have the least adaptive capacity to cope with climate impacts. Consequently, there is increasing support for mainstreaming climate change responses within pro-poor development strategies. Mainstreaming offers the opportunity to implement ‘no regrets’ actions that can improve resiliency to current and future climate impacts for the most vulnerable groups while avoiding potential trade-offs between adaptation and development strategies. Although our understanding of climate change impacts on food systems has expanded, more policy-relevant evidence is required. Stronger emphasis needs to be placed on other important drivers like bioenergy, water and trade. Climate impact science also needs to become more systems-based and improve cross-sectoral frameworks to examine a number of critical linkages: climate-food-trade, climate-nutritionhealth, climate-food-water, and climate-foodenergy. Since the effects of food insecurity and environmental impacts are felt locally, more focus should be given to local validation of climate impacts, taking into account spatial variability, possible adaptation responses, local resource availabilities and constraints, and socio-economic determinants. Robust and reliable evidence is critical to the development of policies to address climate change impacts on agriculture, water and trade. This is critical since climate policy must cope with a certain level of unavoidable uncertainty in the evidence base. Consequently, a structured multi-partner dialogue and information exchange between the scientific community and policy makers is necessary to provide evidencebased support to climate-compatible food security policies. This book examines these issues in detail and is the outcome of an expert consultation organized by FAO in November 2013 which gathered acknowledged experts in climate impact research. The 11 chapters cover the latest scientific and economic evidence on climate impact assessments of crop and livestock systems. The chapters cover methodological overviews of global climate impact assessments (biophysical and economic) of food systems, as well as specific model-based analyses focusing on a particular region (Africa, Europe, Asia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, South East Asia) and food systems (small grains, rice, livestock, bananas). Each chapter starts with take-home messages for nonspecialist readers. Maria Helena Semedo Deputy Director-General xii PREFACE T his book arose in response to the growing debate about the threat of climate change on the global food supply and the challenges it poses for food security, nutrition, and poverty alleviation. This debate also brought sharper focus on the potential increased role of trade as a driver to mitigate some the negative impacts of climate on global food production. To assess the best available evidence on the issue and to make it more accessible for policy, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) organized an expert consultation in November 2013 in Rome. During the two day event, a number of acknowledged experts reviewed the current evidence on climate impacts on food systems, examined the research methodologies and gaps, and discussed the policy implications. The consultation also discussed ways to strengthen dialogue between science and policy and to improve information sharing in support of adaptation strategies to cope with climate impacts on global food supply, food security and trade. The present volume is the outcome of this consultation and the contributed papers that followed. Funding for this work was provided by the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA) as part of the FAO Multi-Partner Programme Support Mechanism (FMM) (2011-2014). This book owes its release to many. The first acknowledgement goes to the participants of the expert consultation and the book’s contributing authors. David Hallam, Director of the Trade and Markets Division, has actively supported this work and provided the required leadership throughout. Dominique van der Mensbrugghe, then senior economist at FAO, provided valuable expert advice on the consultation program and the active experts in this field. Special thanks are addressed to external peer reviewers of selected book chapters, namely: Joseph Eitzinger, Professor, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences Austria; Thomas Hertel, Distinguished Professor and Director, the Global Trade Analysis Project, Purdue University; William Liefert, Senior Economist, United States Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service; and Francesco Tubiello, Senior Officer, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Special acknowledgement goes to Nadia Laouini who ably managed the administrative support for the November 2013 consultation and for the commissioned papers that followed. Marwan Benali provided valuable technical assistance during and after the consultation. Brett Shapiro carefully copy edited the entire manuscript, while Rita Ashton, Ettore Vecchione and Cinzia Tarisciotti collaborated superbly to format and to create the book art design. xiii climate change and food systems: global assessments and implications for food security and trade ACRONYMS ABM Agent-based models AEM agro-ecosystem model AET actual evapotranspiration AEZ Agro-ecological zones AgGRID AgMIP GRIDded crop modelling initiative AGLW Water Resources, Development and Management Service AgMIP Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project AIM Asian Pacific Integrated Model ANZ Australia & New Zealand AOGCM Atmosphere-Ocean General Circulation Models APEX The Agricultural Policy/Environmental eXtender model APSIM Agricultural Production Systems Simulator AR4 4th Assessment Report of the IPCC AR5 5th Assessment Report of the IPCC ASARECA Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa AVHRR Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project BEST BLS Basic Linked System BMZ Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany CBA Cost benefit analysis CC climate change Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security CCAFS CERES Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System CES Constant elasticity of substitution CET Constant Elasticity of Transformation CGCM2 Coupled General Circulation Model Phase 2 CGE Computable general equilibrium CGIAR Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research CIAT International Center for Tropical Agriculture CLUE Conversion of Land Use and its Effects CMIP3 Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project Phase 3 CMIP5 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 CNRM-CM3 National Meteorological Research Centre – Climate Model 3 CO2 carbon dioxide COMECON Council for Mutual Economic Assistance CORAF Conference des Responsables de Recherche Agronomique Africains CSIRO Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation CSIROmk2 Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Mark 2b xiv chapter 1: global assessments of climate impacts on food systems: a summary of findings and policy recommendations CYF DGVM DIVA DRC DSSAT EBRD ECHAM4 ECHAM5 EE4H EE5H ENVISAGE EPIC EPPA EPTD ETS EU EV EVT FACCE FACE FANRPAN FAO FAOSTAT FAPRI-ISU FARM FPU FSM GAEZ GCAM GCM GDD GDP GE GEF GGCM GGCMI GHG GHM GIS GLAM GLASS GLC2000 GLOBIOM GNP GPS Climate-yield factors Dynamic Global Vegetation Model Dynamic Interactive Vulnerability Assessment Democratic Republic of the Congo Decision Support System for Agrotechnology Transfer European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Fourth-generation climate model from Max Planck Institute for Meteorology Fifth-generation climate model from Max Planck Institute for Meteorology leaf four leaf five Environmental Impact and Sustainability Applied General Equilibrium Environmental Policy Integrated Climate Predictions and Policy Analysis Environment and Production Technology Division effective temperature sum European Union equivalent variable evapotranspiration Agriculture, Food Security and Climate Change free air CO2 enrichment Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO statistics Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute – Iowa State University Future Agricultural Resources Model Food Producing Unit farming system model Global agro-ecological zones Global Change Assessment Model Global circulation model Growing degree days Gross Domestic Product general equilibrium Global Environmental Facility Global Gridded Crop Model Global Gridded Crop Model Intercomparison Greenhouse gas Global hydrological modeling geographical information system General Large Area Model The Global Assessment of Security model Global Land Cover 2000 Global Biosphere Management Model gross national product Global Positioning System xv climate change and food systems: global assessments and implications for food security and trade GRACE GTAP GTEM GWUM HA HadCM3 IAM IBSNAT ICASA IFPRI IIASA IKAR ILUC IMPACT IPCC ISI-MIP KG KM2 LAC LARS LGP LPJmL LSM MACSUR MAGNET MAgPIE MBI MCA MCWLA MIO MIROC MIT MMM MODIS Mt NAPA NASA NDVI NGO NPP OECD PE PEGASUS PET PNL xvi Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (NASA/GFZ) Global Trade Analysis Project Global Trade and Environmental Model Global water use modeling hectare Hadley Centre climate prediction model 3 Integrated assessment model International Benchmark Sites Network for Agrotechnology Transfer International Consortium for Agricultural Systems Applications International Food Policy Research Institute International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis Institute of Agricultural Market Studies Indirect land use change International Model for Policy Analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project kilogramme square kilometres Latin America and the Caribbean Long Ashton Research Station Length of the growing period Lund-Post-Jena Dynamic Global Vegetation Model with managed Land land surface scheme Modelling European Agriculture with Climate Change for Food Security Modular Applied GeNeral Equilibrium Tool Model of Agricultural Production and its Impacts on the Environment Market-based instruments Multi-Criteria Analysis Model to capture the Crop-Weather relationship over a Large Area million Model for Interdisciplinary Research On Climate Massachusetts Institute of Technology multi-model mean Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer million tonnes National adaptations plans of actions National Aeronautics and Space Administration (USA) Normalized Difference Vegetation Index non-governmental organization net primary productivity Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development partial equilibrium Predicting Ecosystem Goods and Services Using Scenarios potential evaporation progressive nitrogen limitation chapter 1: global assessments of climate impacts on food systems: a summary of findings and policy recommendations PW Rain/PET RAP RCM RCP SAPWAT SLR SPAM SRES SREX SSP SWOPSIM T/HA TDU TEM TLU Tmax Tmean Tmin UN UNFCCC URB USD USDA USSR WB WDI WMO WOFOST WTMCL WTO YEXO YILD world price rainfall/potential evaporation Representative Agricultural Pathway Regional Climate Model Representative concentration pathway South African Plant WATer sea-level rise Spatial Production Allocation Model Special Report on Emissions Scenarios Special Report on Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters Shared Socio-economic Pathway Static World Policy Simulation tonnes/hectare thermal development units Terrestrial Ecosystem Model tropical livestock units maximum temperature mean temperature minimum temperature United Nations United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change urban United States dollars United States Department of Agriculture Union of Soviet Socialist Republics World Bank World Development Indicators World Meteorological Organization World Food Studies World Trade Model with Climate-Sensitive Land World Trade Organization pure climate change impact on crop and grass yields autonomously adapted yields xvii