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Escaping the perfect storm of simultaneous climate change impacts on agriculture and marine fisheries
Author(s) -
Lauric Thiault,
Camilo Mora,
Joshua E. Cinner,
William W. L. Cheung,
Nicholas A. J. Graham,
Fraser A. JanuchowskiHartley,
David Mouillot,
U. Rashid Sumaila,
Joachim Claudet
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aaw9976
Subject(s) - food security , climate change , vulnerability (computing) , agriculture , natural resource economics , productivity , agricultural productivity , business , production (economics) , population , world population , environmental science , environmental resource management , fishery , geography , economics , ecology , developing country , economic growth , demography , computer security , macroeconomics , archaeology , sociology , computer science , biology
Climate change can alter conditions that sustain food production and availability, with cascading consequences for food security and global economies. Here, we evaluate the vulnerability of societies to the simultaneous impacts of climate change on agriculture and marine fisheries at a global scale. Under a "business-as-usual" emission scenario, ~90% of the world's population-most of whom live in the most sensitive and least developed countries-are projected to be exposed to losses of food production in both sectors, while less than 3% would live in regions experiencing simultaneous productivity gains by 2100. Under a strong mitigation scenario comparable to achieving the Paris Agreement, most countries-including the most vulnerable and many of the largest CO producers-would experience concomitant net gains in agriculture and fisheries production. Reducing societies' vulnerability to future climate impacts requires prompt mitigation actions led by major CO emitters coupled with strategic adaptation within and across sectors.

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