Climate change affecting global food production: Study

<span style="color: #222222;">Climate change is adversely affecting the production of key crops such as wheat and rice, with some countries faring far worse than others. This is as per research, published in the journal PLOS ONE. The world's top 10 crops — barley, cassava, maize, oil palm, rapeseed, rice, sorghum, soybean, sugarcane and wheat — supply a combined 83 per cent of all calories produced on cropland. Yields have long been projected to decrease in future climate conditions.</span><br />” <span style="color: #222222;">&nbsp;</span><br />” <span style="color: #222222;">&nbsp;Scientists from the University of Oxford in the UK and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark used weather and reported crop data to evaluate the potential impact of observed climate change.They found that observed climate change causes a significant yield variation in the world's top 10 crops, ranging from a decrease of 13.4 per cent for oil palm to an increase of 3.5 per cent for soybean, and resulting in an average reduction of about one per cent of consumable food calories from these top 10 crops.</span><br />” <span style="color: #222222;">&nbsp;</span><br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The impacts of climate change on global food production are mostly negative in Europe, Southern Africa, and Australia, generally positive in Latin America, and mixed in Asia and Northern and Central America.The study found that about half of all food-insecure countries are experiencing decreases in crop production — and so are some affluent industrialised countries in Western Europe.In contrast, recent climate change has increased the yields of certain crops in some areas of the upper Midwest US. Researchers said the report has implications for major food companies, commodity traders and the countries in which they operate, as well as for citizens worldwide, researchers said.</span><br />” &nbsp;<br />

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