FAO project

This page contains automatically translated content.

Attribution of climate impacts in agriculture

This (FAO) project on attribution of climate change impacts in agriculture aims to develop a method to identify and quantify agricultural losses attributable to climate change. The focus is on cereal crops, which are a fundamental building block of food (in)security in many developing countries. The project combines climate attribution, yield modeling, and known methods for quantifying losses and damages (losses and damages) to advance scientific understanding of climate impacts in agriculture. The research results may be important for disaster risk management and may one day support the International Mechanism on Loss and Damage Associated with Climate Change Impacts (WIM) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Image source: Hannah Longole, Wikimedia Commons. Licensed under Creative Commons 4.0.

Climate impact attribution in agriculture

This project on climate impact attribution in agriculture (FAO) aims to develop a methodology to identify and quantify agricultural losses attributable to climate change. The focus is on crop yields as a crucial aspect of food (in)security in many low- and middle-income countries. The project aims to bring attribution science, crop modelling, and existing loss and damage quantification methods together. The project outcomes will advance the scientific understanding of climate impacts in agriculture and produce findings that may help to inform disaster risk reduction efforts and eventually support the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage (WIM) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Picture by Hannah Longole, Wikimedia Commons. Licensed under Creative Commons 4.0.