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Journal Article

Non‐Linear Climate Change Impacts on Crop Yields May Mislead Stakeholders

Authors

Ruane,  Alex C.
External Organizations;

Phillips,  Meridel
External Organizations;

Jägermeyr,  Jonas
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Christoph.Mueller

Müller,  Christoph
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

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Supplementary Material (public)
Citation

Ruane, A. C., Phillips, M., Jägermeyr, J., Müller, C. (2024): Non‐Linear Climate Change Impacts on Crop Yields May Mislead Stakeholders. - Earth's Future, 12, 4, e2023EF003842.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EF003842


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_29820
Abstract
We utilize a global warming level (GWL) lens to evaluate global and regional patterns of agricultural impacts as global surface temperature increases, providing a unique perspective on the experience of stakeholders with continued warming in the 21st century. We analyze crop productivity outputs from 11 crop models simulating 5 climate models under 3 emissions scenarios across 4 crops within the AgMIP/ISIMIP Phase 3 ensemble. We categorize regional productivity changes (without adaptation) into 9 characteristic climate change response patterns, identifying consistent increases and decreases as well as non-linear (peak or dip) responses indicative of inflection points reversing trends as GWLs increase. Many maize regions and pockets of wheat, rice and soybean show peak decrease patterns where initial increases may lull stakeholders into complacency or maladaptation before productivity shifts to losses at higher GWLs. Although the GWL perspective has proven useful in connecting diverse climate models and emissions scenarios, we identify multiple pitfalls that recommend proceeding with caution when applying this approach to climate impacts. Chief among these is that carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations at any GWL depend on a climate model's transient climate response (TCR). Higher CO2 concentrations generally benefit crop productivity, so this leads to more pessimistic agricultural projections for so-called “hot” models and can skew multi-model ensemble results as models with high TCR are disproportionately likely to reach higher GWLs. While there are strong connections between many climatic impact-drivers and GWLs, vulnerability and exposure components of food system risk are strongly dependent on development pathways.