4.8 Article

Supply chains for processed potato and tomato products in the United States will have enhanced resilience with planting adaptation strategies

Journal

NATURE FOOD
Volume 2, Issue 11, Pages 862-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s43016-021-00383-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. USDA NIFA [2017-68002-26789]
  2. CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets

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This study utilizes an integrated methodology to explore climate adaptation and mitigation opportunities in the US potato and tomato supply chains, finding that planting adaptation strategies can make supply chains for popular processed products resilient. As food systems face challenges from climate change and resource competition, the need for adaptation and transformation becomes increasingly important.
An integrated methodology that includes climate, crop, economic and life cycle assessment models was developed to explore the climate adaptation and mitigation opportunities throughout the US potato and tomato supply chains. This study shows that supply chains for two popular processed products in the United States, French fries and pasta sauce, will be remarkably resilient, through planting adaptation strategies. Food systems are increasingly challenged to meet growing demand for specialty crops due to the effects of climate change and increased competition for resources. Here, we apply an integrated methodology that includes climate, crop, economic and life cycle assessment models to US potato and tomato supply chains. We find that supply chains for two popular processed products in the United States, French fries and pasta sauce, will be remarkably resilient, through planting adaptation strategies that avoid higher temperatures. Land and water footprints will decline over time due to higher yields, and greenhouse gas emissions can be mitigated by waste reduction and process modification. Our integrated methodology can be applied to other crops, health-based consumer scenarios (fresh versus processed) and geographies, thereby informing decision-making throughout supply chains. Employing such methods will be essential as food systems are forced to adapt and transform to become carbon neutral due to the imperatives of climate change.

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