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Economic impacts of climate change on the A ustralian dairy sector
Author(s) -
Hanslow Kevin,
Gunasekera Don,
Cullen Brendan,
Newth David
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
australian journal of agricultural and resource economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.683
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1467-8489
pISSN - 1364-985X
DOI - 10.1111/1467-8489.12021
Subject(s) - productivity , climate change , pasture , dairy industry , environmental science , competition (biology) , natural resource economics , economics , distribution (mathematics) , geography , ecology , mathematics , biology , forestry , mathematical analysis , macroeconomics , food science
We analyse the economic implications of climate‐driven pressures on the pasture‐based dairy sector in Australia. We use an integrated assessment model that includes a climate scenario generator, a climate‐biophysical response framework and an economywide analytical framework. For the climate scenario generator, we use data from the O z C lim database of the C ommonwealth S cientific and I ndustrial R esearch O rganisation. For the climate‐biophysical response framework, we use the D airy M od model with inputs of changes in climate variables from O z C lim to quantify climate change effects on pasture growth and productivity. For the economywide analytical framework, we use the N ational Integrated A ssessment M odel to quantify the economic implications of these effects on the dairy sector. The simulated pattern of regional changes in dairy output is not a simple function of the changes in dairy productivity. Our results show that the relative size of productivity changes across regions affects the relative competitive advantage of dairy‐producing regions. Several factors affect the regional distribution of simulated dairy‐output changes, including substitution among sources of dairy output and competition for inputs like supplementary feed. An increased output in regions with moderate reductions in dairy productivity may occur because the severely climate‐affected regions absorb the greatest loss in output.