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Abstract
Systematic model inter-comparison helps to narrow discrepancies in the analysis of the future impact of climate change on agricultural production. This paper presents a set of alternative scenarios by five global climate and agro-economic models. Covering integrated assessment (IMAGE), partial equilibrium (CAPRI, GLOBIOM, MAgPIE) and computable general equilibrium (MAGNET) models ensures a good coverage of biophysical and economic agricultural features. These models are harmonized with respect to basic model drivers, to assess the range of potential impacts of climate change on the agricultural sector by 2050. Moreover, they quantify the economic consequences of stringent global emission mitigation efforts, such as non-CO2 emission taxes and land-based mitigation options, to stabilize global warming at 2 °C by the end of the century under different Shared Socioeconomic Pathways. A key contribution of the paper is a vis-à-vis comparison of climate change impacts relative to the impact of mitigation measures. In addition, our scenario design allows assessing the impact of the residual climate change on the mitigation challenge. From a global perspective, the impact of climate change on agricultural production by mid-century is negative but small. A larger negative effect on agricultural production, most pronounced for ruminant meat production, is observed when emission mitigation measures compliant with a 2 °C target are put in place. Our results indicate that a mitigation strategy that embeds residual climate change effects (RCP2.6) has a negative impact on global agricultural production relative to a no-mitigation strategy with stronger climate impacts (RCP6.0). However, this is partially due to the limited impact of the climate change scenarios by 2050. The magnitude of price changes is different amongst models due to methodological differences. Further research to achieve a better harmonization is needed, especially regarding endogenous food and feed demand, including substitution across individual commodities, and endogenous technological change.
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1 Wageningen University and Research (WUR), Wageningen Economic Research, The Hague, The Netherlands; Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.
2 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Laxenburg, Austria
3 Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Potsdam, Germany; Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
4 Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL), The Hague, The Netherlands
5 EuroCARE, Bonn, Germany
6 European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Seville, Spain
7 Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Potsdam, Germany
8 Wageningen University and Research (WUR), Wageningen Economic Research, The Hague, The Netherlands; International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Laxenburg, Austria
9 Wageningen University and Research (WUR), Wageningen Economic Research, The Hague, The Netherlands