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(2005) A reassessment of the economic effects of global climate change on U.S. agriculture

Authors
Adams R.M. , Fleming R.A. , Chang C. , Mccarl B.A. , Rosenzweig C.
Source
Climatic Change (122)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
147-167
Journal Number
2
Notes

Abstract. This study uses recent GCM forecasts, improved plant science and water supply data and refined economic modeling capabilities to reassess the economic consequences of long-term climate change on U.S. agriculture. Changes in crop yields, crop water demand and irrigation water arising from climate change result in changes in economic welfare. Economic consequences of the three GCM scenarios are mixed; GISS and GFDL-QFlux result in aggregate economic gains, UKMO implies losses. As in previous studies, the yield enhancing effects of atmospheric CO2 are an important determinant of potential economic consequences. Inclusion of changes in world food production and associated export changes generally have a positive affect on U.S. agriculture. As with previous studies, the magnitude of economic effects estimated here are a small percentage of U.S. agricultural value.

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Folder Categories
Terrestrial Associated Socio-Economic Impacts Data Availability
 
Tag_blue Keywords
projections models socio-economic impacts agriculture GCM's GISS GFDL-QFlux UKMO
 
Map Countries
United States
 
Map Regions
North America
 

Entered by: Susana Fernandez, 5/2009

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