The following article is Open access

Global scale climate–crop yield relationships and the impacts of recent warming

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Published 16 March 2007 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation David B Lobell and Christopher B Field 2007 Environ. Res. Lett. 2 014002 DOI 10.1088/1748-9326/2/1/014002

This article is corrected by 2007 Environ. Res. Lett. 2 011002

1748-9326/2/1/014002

Abstract

Changes in the global production of major crops are important drivers of food prices, food security and land use decisions. Average global yields for these commodities are determined by the performance of crops in millions of fields distributed across a range of management, soil and climate regimes. Despite the complexity of global food supply, here we show that simple measures of growing season temperatures and precipitation—spatial averages based on the locations of each crop—explain ∼30% or more of year-to-year variations in global average yields for the world's six most widely grown crops. For wheat, maize and barley, there is a clearly negative response of global yields to increased temperatures. Based on these sensitivities and observed climate trends, we estimate that warming since 1981 has resulted in annual combined losses of these three crops representing roughly 40 Mt or $5 billion per year, as of 2002. While these impacts are small relative to the technological yield gains over the same period, the results demonstrate already occurring negative impacts of climate trends on crop yields at the global scale.

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