| 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. |
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).