Possible pathways and tensions in the food and water nexus
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Grafton, Quentin
Williams, John
Jiang, Qiang
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American Geophysical Union
Abstract
“Bottom-up” field-based, crop-hydrological models are used to estimate food production and irrigation water extractions under multiple scenarios of water and nitrogen use and crop yield increases from 2010 to 2050 for 19 countries. The results show: (1) a food deficit before 2050 under a worst case climate change scenario in terms of annual crop yield improvement; (2) substantial water
deficits, as a result of irrigation, for major food-producing countries that will prevent these nations from
meeting their domestic food requirements in the absence of investments in water infrastructure or food
imports; and (3) a plateau in terms of crop food production associated with increased water extractions
given no further increase in the current area of irrigated agriculture. Possible pathways to respond to the
tensions in the food–water nexus are evaluated and include: (1) higher water productivity; (2) food trade;
(3) improvements in both crop yield and “sustainable” total factor productivity; (4) greater investment
in water infrastructure; and (5) integrative policies and decision processes. Without a combination of
some, or all, of these possible pathways, appropriately adapted to bio-physical and socio-economic
circumstances, the world faces grave risks in food and water security out to 2050.
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Earth's Future
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
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