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The largest crop production shocks: magnitude, causes and frequency

Authors

Jehn,  Florian Ulrich
External Organizations;

Mulhall,  James
External Organizations;

Blouin,  Simon
External Organizations;

Gajewski,  Łukasz G.
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Nico.Wunderling

Wunderling,  Nico       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

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Citation

Jehn, F. U., Mulhall, J., Blouin, S., Gajewski, Ł. G., Wunderling, N. (2026): The largest crop production shocks: magnitude, causes and frequency. - Earth System Dynamics, 17, 1, 151-166.
https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-17-151-2026


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_34069
Abstract
Food is the foundation of our society. We often take it for granted, but stocks are rarely available for longer than a year, and food production can be disrupted by catastrophic events, both locally and globally. To highlight such major risks to the food system, we analyzed FAO crop production data from 1961 to 2023 to find the largest crop production shock for every country and identify its causes. We show that large crop production shocks regularly happen in all countries. This is most often driven by climate (especially droughts), but disruptions by other causes like economic disruptions, environmental hazards (especially storms) and conflict also occur regularly. The global mean of largest country-level shocks averaged −29 %, with African countries experiencing the most extreme collapses (−80 % in Botswana), while Asian and Central European nations faced more moderate largest shocks (−5 % to −15 %). While global shocks above 5 % are rare (occurring once in 63 years), continent-level shocks of this magnitude happen every 1.8 years on average. These results show that large disruptions to our food system frequently happen on a local to regional scale and can plausibly happen on a global scale as well. We therefore argue that more preparation and planning are needed to avoid such global disruptions to food production.