Climate change and food security
Gregory, P.J., Ingram, J.S., Brklacich, M Climate change and food security. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences. Volume 360, Issue 1463, 29 November 2005, Pages 2139-2148
Gregory, P.J., Ingram, J.S., Brklacich, M Climate change and food
security. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of
London. Series B, Biological sciences. Volume 360, Issue 1463, 29
November 2005, Pages 2139-2148
Abstract- Dynamic interactions between and within the
biogeophysical and human environments lead to the production,
processing, distribution, preparation and consumption of food,
resulting in food systems that underpin food security. Food systems
encompass food availability (production, distribution and
exchange), food access (affordability, allocation and preference)
and food utilization (nutritional and societal values and safety),
so that food security is, therefore, diminished when food systems
are stressed. Such stresses may be induced by a range of factors in
addition to climate change and/or other agents of environmental
change (e.g. conflict, HIV/AIDS) and may be particularly severe
when these factors act in combination. Urbanization and
globalization are causing rapid changes to food systems. Climate
change may affect food systems in several ways ranging from direct
effects on crop production (e.g. changes in rainfall leading to
drought or flooding, or warmer or cooler temperatures leading to
changes in the length of growing season), to changes in markets,
food prices and supply chain infrastructure. The relative
importance of climate change for food security differs between
regions. For example, in southern Africa, climate is among the most
frequently cited drivers of food insecurity because it acts both as
an underlying, ongoing issue and as a short-lived shock. The low
ability to cope with shocks and to mitigate long-term stresses
means that coping strategies that might be available in other
regions are unavailable or inappropriate. In other regions, though,
such as parts of the Indo-Gangetic Plain of India, other drivers,
such as labour issues and the availability and quality of ground
water for irrigation, rank higher than the direct effects of
climate change as factors influencing food security. Because of the
multiple socio-economic and bio-physical factors affecting food
systems and hence food security, the capacity to adapt food systems
to reduce their vulnerability to climate change is not uniform.
Improved systems of food production, food distribution and economic
access may all contribute to food systems adapted to cope with
climate change, but in adopting such changes it will be important
to ensure that they contribute to sustainability. Agriculture is a
major contributor of the greenhouse gases methane (CH4) and nitrous
oxide (N2O), so that regionally derived policies promoting adapted
food systems need to mitigate further climate change.



