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Can Our Agriculture Tackle Climate Change - Business Line
Can Our Agriculture Tackle Climate Change - Business Line
Can Our Agriculture Tackle Climate Change - Business Line
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The latest report of the inter-governmental panel points to the impact of extreme weather events on farming in India
India has long been regarded a climate change hotspot, and the subcontinent is at the forefront of the worst impacts
in terms of human livelihood and food security. Given that 70 per cent of our arable land is estimated to be prone to
drought, 12 per cent to floods and 8 per cent to cyclones, we need to pay attention.
According to the fifth assessment report of working group II, released by the inter-governmental panel on climate
change (IPCC), by 2100, with the current pace of climate change and development trends, and in the absence of
adaptation, millions of people in South Asia will be affected by droughts, glacier melts, cyclones and coastal flooding.
Six months earlier, the working group I report established that human-induced climate change is leading to
increasing atmospheric temperatures, rising sea levels and ocean warming.
Hungry in South Asia
The recurrent theme of this assessment, with regard to agriculture, is that without adaptation, climate change will
exacerbate current poverty levels and trigger new poverty traps in vulnerable areas.
South Asia already has the highest number of food insecure people with 300 million undernourished India
accounts for 250 million of them. The implications are even more grim when we turn the lens on agriculture.
Producing enough food sustainably to meet increasing demands and with shrinking resources such as land and water
will throw up unprecedented challenges.
While extreme and erratic weather events will continue to test the agriculture sector, climate change is also
progressively affecting the yield and quality of major crops. A study from the Indian Agriculture Research Institute
shows that for every 1C rise in temperature, 4-5 million tonnes of wheat will be lost in India under the current land
use scenario. The impact on productivity of rice in Punjab has shown that with all other climatic variables remaining
constant, temperature increases of 1C, 2C and 3C would reduce the grain yield of rice by 5.4, 7.4 and 25.1 per cent,
respectively.
Losses are also projected for other crops such as mustard, monsoon sorghum and fruits and vegetables. Himachal
Pradesh, once known as the apple basket of India, has become too warm and cultivation is shifting north to cooler
regions.
In India, most small-holder farmers subsist on rain-fed agriculture, and the IPCC report projects an increase in
extreme rainfall events over central India. All scenarios point towards an increase in mean and extreme precipitation
in the summer monsoon. Such variations in rainfall have huge consequences on food production and the livelihood of
smallholder farmers. Changes in rainfall patterns will require better water management strategies and investments in
storage infrastructure and water-use technologies.
Ocean and sea-water warming is also affecting the current abundance and distribution of freshwater and marine fish.
Commercial fish varieties found in Asian waters will migrate to cooler waters as sea-water temperatures rise. This will
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4/8/2014
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