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by deanCommie 999 days ago
The world's climate has been consistent for most of the history of modern humanity - certainly since the advent of farming - until the 20th century.

Where humans grow their food is where they've been growing the same food for THOUSANDS of years.

Industrialization has certainly improved yields and the scale but by and large the spaces we allocate for farming have been chosen because they are optimal for the specific plants we grow there.

Rapidly changing climate means many of these locations will no longer be efficient or effective.

The regions of the world that are becoming more comparably temperate and perhaps theoretically would be the new ideal do not have the nutrients in the soil to be effective.

And anyways as long as the climate continues to evolve rapidly, they will not stay stable for long.

This isn't as simple as "We'll just start growing our food 100 kilometers to the north" and nothing else changes.

3 comments

> The world's climate has been consistent for most of the history of modern humanity

That really was not the case.

Most major civilizational collapses (Bronze age, Rome) can be linked to climate change (of course premodern societies were generally much more sensitive to even relatively slight changes).

Those civilisational collapses were in response to changes in climate far less than what we're now facing.

Graphical representation of global temperatures, where the relevant period for human civilisations is roughly the past 10,000 (10kyr):

<https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/hires/2020/highfidelity.jpg>

Note too that the timescale is discontinous, with the scale expanding at 30,000 years ago and in 1850 (173 years ago). The span to the right of 1850 shows 350 years, the span to the left of 1850 shows ~30,000 years, before expanding again to show 65 million years of climate history, back to the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs.

Chart is "Average Global Surface Temperature: Difference to 1961--1990 (°C)". Citation is IODP: International Ocean Discovery Program.

Appearing in context here:

"High-fidelity record of Earth's climate history puts current changes in context" by University of California - Santa Cruz. September 10, 2020.

<https://phys.org/news/2020-09-high-fidelity-earth-climate-hi...>

And yet we're all still here..
Except that all agricultural lands have increased production with increased CO2. There hasn't been any degrading of agriculture to date with the warming we've seen. And at 400ppm to 800ppm for CO2 you barely get any more greenhouse effect from this doubling, it's already nearly saturated. At most only .7C more increase which is easily manageable. Plug in 400 and 800 here, it barely changes the effect: https://climatemodels.uchicago.edu/modtran/
Yeah, but it's not just the CO2/temperatures alone.

Heatwaves, heavy rainfalls, droughts, hailstorms and other extreme weather events can devastate crops and disrupt agricultural systems.

Don't forget that overshoot is our problem, and climate change is just one of its symptoms. The loss of biodiversity, particularly pollinators like bees, can threaten crop yields. Increased pests and diseases. Soil erosion. Fires. Etc. etc.

https://skepticalscience.com/co2-plant-food-advanced.htm

A specific plant’s response to excess CO2 is sensitive to a variety of factors, including but not limited to: age, genetic variations, functional types, time of year, atmospheric composition, competing plants, disease and pest opportunities, moisture content, nutrient availability, temperature, and sunlight availability. The continued increase of CO2 will represent a powerful forcing agent for a wide variety of changes critical to the success of many plants, affecting natural ecosystems and with large implications for global food production. The global increase of CO2 is thus a grand biological experiment, with countless complications that make the net effect of this increase very difficult to predict with any appreciable level of detail.

And yet the cyclonic energy on earth seems to be slightly decreasing or in stasis over the last forty years: http://tropical.atmos.colostate.edu/Realtime/index.php?arch&...

Use the drop down and pick the last option.

Cyclonic energy may show a specific trend, but it's just one aspect of the broader climate system. While cyclones might not have intensified, the multifaceted impacts on agriculture, ecosystems, and weather patterns due to increasing CO2 are undeniable. The entire picture should be considered, not just isolated metrics.
Ok, please continue, what are these multifaceted impacts?
Increased CO2 impacts agriculture through changes in precipitation patterns, heat stress, reduced soil moisture, soil salinity, accelerated weed growth, pest and disease proliferation, pollinator disruption, shifts in crop phenology, nutrient imbalances in crops, decreased water availability, altered growing seasons, and the possibility of novel crop diseases, to name just a few.

The full range of potential impacts is vast, complex, and is a subject of ongoing research.

> This isn't as simple as "We'll just start growing our food 100 kilometers to the north"

why not? doing that would ironically counter all your prior arguments. besides displacing the incumbents and needing adaptation, I do not see a reason why the poor need to be taxed 30% in energy costs in Seattle