4.7 Article

Estimated crop yield losses due to surface ozone exposure and economic damage in India

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 12, Pages 7329-7338

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-014-2657-6

Keywords

Air pollution impacts; Surface ozone; Crop yield losses; Economical losses; Food security; Atmospheric condition

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In this study, we estimate yield losses and economic damage of two major crops (winter wheat and rabi rice) due to surface ozone (O-3) exposure using hourly O-3 concentrations for the period 2002-2007 in India. This study estimates crop yield losses according to two indices of O-3 exposure: 7-h seasonal daytime (0900-1600 hours) mean measured O-3 concentration (M7) and AOT40 (accumulation exposure of O-3 concentration over a threshold of 40 parts per billion by volume during daylight hours (0700-1800 hours), established by field studies. Our results indicate that relative yield loss from 5 to 11 % (6-30 %) for winter wheat and 3-6 % (9-16 %) for rabi rice using M7 (AOT40) index of the mean total winter wheat 81 million metric tons (Mt) and rabi rice 12 Mt production per year for the period 2002-2007. The estimated mean crop production loss (CPL) for winter wheat are from 9 to 29 Mt, account for economic cost loss was from 1,222 to 4,091 million US$ annually. Similarly, the mean CPL for rabi rice are from 0.64 to 2.1 Mt, worth 86-276 million US$. Our calculated winter wheat and rabi rice losses agree well with previous results, providing the further evidence that large crop yield losses occurring in India due to current O-3 concentration and further elevated O-3 concentration in future may pose threat to food security.

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