UN agencies release report on extreme heat's impact on global agriculture

The World Meteorological Organization and Food and Agriculture Organization have issued a joint report detailing how extreme heat is disrupting global food production. The document highlights severe effects in Brazil and other countries, urging better adaptation strategies. It responds to a United Nations call to address heat risks for workers and food systems.

A new report from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), released last week, merges weather and agricultural data to show extreme heat's compounding effects on food systems worldwide. Brazil serves as the main case study, where heat waves in 2024 damaged soy and corn yields in states like São Paulo, along with peanuts, potatoes, sugarcane, and arabica coffee. Livestock such as pigs suffered heat stress, and flooding disrupted shrimp markets in Rio Grande do Sul. A heat index of 144.1 degrees Fahrenheit was recorded in Rio de Janeiro earlier that year, the highest in a decade, according to the report. Martial Bernoux, senior natural resources officer at FAO, stated, “We’re not moving at a speed that is good enough,” adding that residual risks are increasing. The past 11 years mark the warmest on record, with the report projecting up to 250 days a year too hot for outdoor work in parts of South Asia, tropical sub-Saharan Africa, and Central and South America by century's end under high emissions. Examples include Chile's 2016 salmon losses from algae blooms, U.S. Pacific Northwest crop failures in 2021, India's 2022 wheat and dairy declines, and Kyrgyzstan's locust outbreak last spring. The report follows UN Secretary-General António Guterres' 2024 call for protections, including for 2.4 billion workers at risk per a prior ILO finding. Guterres noted heat kills nearly half a million people annually, far more than cyclones. Naia Ormaza Zulueta, a researcher at the University of British Columbia, praised the diagnosis but criticized the limited focus on workers, saying, “The workers are present in the diagnosis, but they’re largely absent in the prescription.”

관련 기사

U.S. map illustration highlighting uneven state warming: hotter highs in West, warmer lows in North, contrasting averages and extremes.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Study finds most U.S. states are warming in uneven ways that averages can miss

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지 사실 확인됨

A study in PLOS Climate reports that U.S. warming trends vary sharply by state and by whether researchers look at temperature averages or extremes. Using data from 1950 to 2021 for the 48 contiguous states, the authors found that 27 states showed statistically significant increases in average temperature, while 41 showed warming in at least one part of their temperature range—such as hotter highs in parts of the West and warmer cold-season lows in parts of the North.

The World Health Organization reports that more than 200,000 people in Europe have died from extreme heat since 2022. Most of the deaths could have been prevented, according to the WHO's Europe chief.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Global food prices rose to their highest level since September in March, fueled by higher energy costs linked to the West Asia conflict. The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization cautioned that a prolonged war could reduce planting and yields, affecting supplies and prices through this year and beyond.

India Meteorological Department Director General Mrutyunjay Mohapatra stated that northern parts of the Indo-Gangetic plains, eastern coastal states, Gujarat, Maharashtra and adjoining areas will experience higher-than-normal heatwave days this year. He pointed to climatologically prone areas where temperatures exceed 40 degrees Celsius. Measures including WhatsApp groups and display boards are in place to assist vulnerable populations.

AI에 의해 보고됨

A man in his 80s in Seoul died from heat-related illness, marking South Korea's first such death this year and the earliest on record.

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부