Published June 18, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Impacts of climate change on global agriculture accounting for adaptation

  • 1. University of Illinois
  • 2. University of California, Berkeley
  • 3. Rhodium Group
  • 4. BlackRock
  • 5. University of Chicago
  • 6. National Bureau of Economic Research
  • 7. Rutgers University
  • 8. University of Minnesota
  • 9. Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  • 10. University of Delaware
  • 11. Fudan University

Description

Climate change threatens global food systems, but the extent to which adaptation will reduce losses remains unknown and controversial. Even within the well-studied context of US agriculture, some analyses argue that adaptation will be widespread and climate damages small, whereas others conclude that adaptation will be limited and losses severe. Scenario-based analyses indicate that adaptation should have notable consequences on global agricultural productivity, but there has been no systematic study of how extensively real-world producers actually adapt at the global scale. Here we empirically estimate the impact of global producer adaptations using longitudinal data on six staple crops spanning 12,658 regions, capturing two-thirds of global crop calories. We estimate that global production declines 5.5 × 1014 kcal annually per 1 °C global mean surface temperature (GMST) rise (120 kcal per person per day or 4.4% of recommended consumption per 1 °C; P < 0.001). We project that adaptation and income growth alleviate 23% of global losses in 2050 and 34% at the end of the century (6% and 12%, respectively; moderate-emissions scenario), but substantial residual losses remain for all staples except rice. In contrast to analyses of other outcomes that project the greatest damages to the global poor, we find that global impacts are dominated by losses to modern-day breadbaskets with favourable climates and limited present adaptation, although losses in low-income regions losses are also substantial. These results indicate a scale of innovation, cropland expansion or further adaptation that might be necessary to ensure food security in a changing climate.

Data availability

Replication data (including historical yield and weather data) and code for the main paper figures and table are available on our Zenodo repository at https://zenodo.org/records/14511340 (ref. 110). Instructions for downloading and running the replication code are provided on the repository website.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41586-025-09085-w
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:15620

Funding

Carnegie Corporation
University of Chicago
International Growth Centre
National Science Foundation
SES1463644
Sloan Foundation
Tata Centre for Development
Skoll Global Threats Fund
King Philanthropies
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Heising-Simons Family Fund
Ray and Dagmar Dolby Fund
University of Chicago
Mark Heising and Liz Simons
National Key Research and Development Program of China
2020YFA0608602
National Natural Science Foundation of China
42175066

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies, Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics, Harris School of Public Policy Studies Research Publications