4.6 Article

A generic risk assessment framework to evaluate historical and future climate-induced risk for rainfed corn and soybean yield in the U.S. Midwest

Journal

WEATHER AND CLIMATE EXTREMES
Volume 33, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.wace.2021.100369

Keywords

Risk assessment; Synthetic climate generation; Crop yield prediction; U.S. Midwest; Rainfed corn; Rainfed soybean; Climate change

Funding

  1. Faculty Fellowship on Climate Risk, Gies College of Business at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign,
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) Career Award [1847334]
  3. Center for Advanced Studies at UIUC

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The study found that climate has a significant impact on corn and soybean yield variability in the U.S. Midwest, with higher risk levels in the southwest and northwest regions leading to up to 25% yield reduction compared to other areas. The severity of major drought events in 1988 and 2012 for corn and soybean were quantified, and the study predicts an increase in crop yield risk under future climate scenarios at 2050.
Fluctuations in temperature and precipitation are expected to increase with global climate change, with more frequent, more intense and longer-lasting extreme events, posing greater challenges for the security of global food production. Here we proposed a generic framework to assess the impact of climate-induced crop yield risk under both current and future scenarios by combining a stochastic model for synthetic climate generation with a well-validated statistical crop yield model. The synthetic climate patterns were generated using the extended Empirical Orthogonal Function method based on historically observed and projected climate conditions. We applied our framework to assess the corn and soybean yield risk in the U.S. Midwest for historical and future climate conditions. We found that: (1) in the U.S. Midwest, about 45% and 40% of the interannual variability in corn and soybean yield, respectively, can be explained by the climate; (2) the risk level is higher in the southwest and northwest regions of the U.S. Midwest corresponding to 25% yield reduction for both corn and soybean compared to other regions; (3) the severity for the 1988 and 2012 major droughts quantified by our method represent 21-year and 30-year events for corn, and 7-year and 12-year events for soybean, respectively; (4) the crop yield risk will increase under a future climate scenario (i.e., Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 or RCP 8.5 at 2050) compared with the current climate condition, with averaged yield decreases and yield variability increases for both corn and soybean. The framework and the results of this study enable applications for risk management policies and practices for the agriculture sectors.

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