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Food trade disruption after global catastrophes

Urheber*innen

Jehn,  Florian Ulrich
External Organizations;

Gajewski,  Łukasz G.
External Organizations;

Hedlund,  Johanna
External Organizations;

Arnscheidt,  Constantin W.
External Organizations;

Xia,  Lili
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Nico.Wunderling

Wunderling,  Nico       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Denkenberger,  David
External Organizations;

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esd-16-1585-2025.pdf
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Zitation

Jehn, F. U., Gajewski, Ł. G., Hedlund, J., Arnscheidt, C. W., Xia, L., Wunderling, N., Denkenberger, D. (2025): Food trade disruption after global catastrophes. - Earth System Dynamics, 16, 5, 1585-1603.
https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-16-1585-2025


Zitierlink: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_33065
Zusammenfassung
The global food trade system is resilient to minor disruptions but vulnerable to major ones. Major shocks can arise from global catastrophic risks, such as abrupt sunlight reduction scenarios (e.g. nuclear war) or global catastrophic infrastructure loss (e.g. due to severe geomagnetic storms or a global pandemic). We use a network model to examine how these two scenarios could impact global food trade, focusing on wheat, maize, soybeans, and rice, accounting for about 60 % of global calorie intake. Our findings indicate that an abrupt sunlight reduction scenario, with soot emissions equivalent to a major nuclear war between India and Pakistan (37 Tg), could severely disrupt trade, causing most countries to lose the vast majority of their food imports (50 %–100 % decrease), primarily due to the main exporting countries being heavily affected. Global catastrophic infrastructure loss with a comparable impact on yields as the abrupt sunlight reduction has a more homogeneous distribution of yield declines, resulting in most countries losing up to half of their food imports (25 %–50 % decrease). Thus, our analysis shows that both scenarios could significantly impact the food trade. However, the abrupt sunlight reduction scenario is likely more disruptive than global catastrophic infrastructure loss regarding the effects of yield reductions on food trade. This study underscores the vulnerabilities of the global food trade network to catastrophic risks and the need for enhanced preparedness.