Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC), Venice, Italy.
Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, Venice, Italy.
Sci Rep. 2022 Mar 18;12(1):4709. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-08696-x.
It is generally accepted that climate change is having a negative impact on food security. However, most of the literature variously focuses on the complex and many mechanisms linking climate stressors; the links with food production or productivity rather than food security; and future rather than current effects. In contrast, we investigate the extent to which current changes in food insecurity can be plausibly attributed to climate change. We combine food insecurity data for 83 countries from the FAO food insecurity experience scale (FIES) with reanalysed climate data from ERA5-Land, and use a panel data regression with time-varying coefficients. This framework allows us to estimate whether the relationship between food insecurity and temperature anomaly is changing over time. We also control for Human Development Index, and drought measured by six-month Standardized Precipitation Index. Our empirical findings suggest that for every 1 [Formula: see text] of temperature anomaly, severe global food insecurity has increased by 1.4% (95% CI 1.3-1.47) in 2014 but by 1.64% (95% CI 1.6-1.65) in 2019. This impact is higher in the case of moderate to severe food insecurity, with a 1 [Formula: see text] increase in temperature anomaly resulting in a 1.58% (95% CI 1.48-1.68) increase in 2014 but a 2.14% (95% CI 2.08-2.20) increase in 2019. Thus, the results show that the temperature anomaly has not only increased the probability of food insecurity, but the magnitude of this impact has increased over time. Our counterfactual analysis suggests that climate change has been responsible for reversing some of the improvements in food security that would otherwise have been realised, with the highest impact in Africa. Our analysis both provides more evidence of the costs of climate change, and as such the benefits of mitigation, and also highlights the importance of targeted and efficient policies to reduce food insecurity. These policies are likely to need to take into account local contexts, and might include efforts to increase crop yields, targeted safety nets, and behavioural programs to promote household resilience.
人们普遍认为,气候变化正在对粮食安全产生负面影响。然而,大多数文献主要关注将气候胁迫因素联系起来的复杂机制;关注与粮食生产或生产力的联系,而不是粮食安全;以及关注未来而非当前的影响。相比之下,我们研究了当前粮食不安全程度在多大程度上可以归因于气候变化。我们将粮农组织粮食不安全经验量表(FIES)中 83 个国家的粮食不安全数据与 ERA5-Land 的再分析气候数据相结合,并使用具有时变系数的面板数据回归。这一框架使我们能够估计粮食不安全与温度异常之间的关系是否随时间而变化。我们还控制了人类发展指数和由六个月标准化降水指数衡量的干旱。我们的实证结果表明,在 2014 年,每出现 1°C 的温度异常,全球严重粮食不安全就会增加 1.4%(95%置信区间 1.3-1.47),而在 2019 年则增加 1.64%(95%置信区间 1.6-1.65)。在中度至严重粮食不安全的情况下,这种影响更大,温度异常增加 1°C,2014 年粮食不安全的发生率增加 1.58%(95%置信区间 1.48-1.68),而 2019 年则增加 2.14%(95%置信区间 2.08-2.20)。因此,结果表明,温度异常不仅增加了粮食不安全的可能性,而且这种影响的幅度随着时间的推移而增加。我们的反事实分析表明,气候变化不仅导致了粮食安全状况的一些改善出现逆转,否则这些改善本来会实现,而且在非洲的影响最大。我们的分析不仅提供了气候变化成本的更多证据,因此也提供了缓解成本的好处,还强调了采取有针对性和有效的政策减少粮食不安全的重要性。这些政策可能需要考虑到当地情况,并且可能包括努力提高作物产量、有针对性的安全网以及促进家庭适应能力的行为方案。