4.5 Article

Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) approach to study the impact of climate change and other factors on rice production in South Korea

Journal

JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages 2256-2270

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wcc.2021.030

Keywords

ADF; ARDL; climatic factors; cointegration; PP; technical factors

Funding

  1. Innovation Platform Open Fund Project of Hunan Education Department, China [19K087]

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The study explores the impact of climate change, technology, and agricultural policy on rice production in South Korea. Results show that an increase in CO2 emissions and mean temperature positively affect rice production, while rainfall has an adverse impact. Policy recommendations include implementing new policies, acquiring advanced weather forecasting technology, and providing virgin arable land to deserving rice growers for future food security.
The study aims to explore the impact of climate change, technology, and agricultural policy on rice production in South Korea. In the presence of a long-run relationship among variables, the results show that an increase in CO2 emissions increases rice production by 0.15%. The mean temperature raises rice production by 1.16%. The rainfall has an adverse impact on rice production which shows improper irrigation systems and weather forecasting reports. Similarly, for technical factors, the area under rice and fertilizer used in the study area has a direct effect on rice production. The study suggests that the Korean government needs to implement new policies and acquire advanced technology about weather forecasting. The concerned authorities need to inform rice growers about future weather and climate changes. We recommend that Korea needs to provide virgin arable undivided land to deserving rice growers based on ownership and/or lease for future food security. Finally, the study recommends that legislators should recommend policies for sustainable food security with the introduction of new agricultural technologies, subsidies, along with the provision of new varieties of seeds that can absorb the adverse shock of climate and ensure a suitable amount of food.

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