4.4 Article

Climate change creates opportunities to expand agriculture in the Hindu Kush Himalaya but will cause considerable ecosystem trade-offs

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 4, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2515-7620/ac9aea

Keywords

climate change; ecosystem services; food security; trade-offs; hindukush himalaya

Funding

  1. Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) [4302019-00094]
  2. Food from Thought Program at the University of Guelph - Canada First Research Excellence Fund

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Theoretically, climate change may allow agriculture in once unsuitable areas by creating warmer temperatures and more precipitation in mountainous regions. This paper assesses the potential of agricultural expansion in the Hindukush Himalaya by estimating the extent of Climate Change Driven Agricultural Frontiers (CCDAFs) and analyzing the potential impacts on ecosystem services. The results show that there is a significant potential for agricultural frontiers to emerge in the region by 2100, but developing these areas will have implications for carbon storage, soil quality, biodiversity, and water security.
Theoretically, climate change will create warmer temperatures and greater precipitation in mountainous regions, making agriculture possible in areas that were once unsuitable for cropping. But the extent and the nature of these 'agricultural frontiers' is as yet unknown. Building upon recent research on Climate Change Driven Agricultural Frontiers [CCDAFs], this paper assesses the potential of agricultural expansion in the Hindukush Himalaya [HKH]. Using FAO crop suitability data, we estimated the extent of CCDAFs under three Representative Concentration Pathways for 13 crops as well as the potential impacts of developing these frontiers on ecosystem services. We show that under climate change projected by the IPSL- CM5A-LR climate model, 34,507 km(2) of agricultural frontiers may emerge in the HKH by 2100 under RCP 6.0. Additionally, results suggest that there will be new opportunities for crop diversification as individual crops will gain frontier area. However, developing these CCDAFs will impact supportive and regulating ecosystem services including carbon storage and sequestration, soil quality, biodiversity, and hydrological processes-with implications for regional water security. These impacts must be considered alongside the benefits of additional food production when evaluating the net benefits of developing CCDAFS.

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