Impacts of population growth, economic development, and technical change on global food production and consumption
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Autor(es)"Schneider, Uwe A. Havlík, Petr Schmid, Erwin Valin, Hugo Mosnier, Aline Obersteiner, Michael Böttcher, Hannes Skalský, Rastislav Balkovi?, Juraj Sauer, Timm Fritz, Steffen"
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Instituição do Autor correspondenteResearch Unit Sustainability and Global Change, Hamburg University, Germany
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ContactoEste endereço de email está protegido contra piratas. Necessita ativar o JavaScript para o visualizar.
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Revista e nºAgricultural Systems 104: 204-215
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Ano2011
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DOI10.1016/j.agsy.2010.11.003
Projeto
European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) under Grant Agreement No. 212535, Climate Change-Terrestrial Adaptation and Mitigation in Europe (CC-TAME), www.cctame. eu; No. 226487, European approach to GEOSS (EUROGEOSS), www.eurogeoss.eu; (seeArticleII.30.of the Grant Agreements), from the EU LIFE program funded EC4MACS Project (www.ec4mac- s.eu).
Resumo
Over the next decades mankind will demand more food from fewer land and water resources. This study quantifies the food production impacts of four alternative development scenarios from the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and the Special Report on Emission Scenarios. Partially and jointly considered are land and water supply impacts from population growth, and technical change, as well as forest and agricultural commodity demand shifts from population growth and economic development. The income impacts on food demand are computed with dynamic elasticities. Simulations with a global, partial equilibrium model of the agricultural and forest sectors show that per capita food levels increase in all examined development scenarios with minor impacts on food prices. Global agricultural land increases by up to 14% between 2010 and 2030. Deforestation restrictions strongly impact the price of land and water resources but have little consequences for the global level of food production and food prices. While projected income changes have the highest partial impact on per capita food consumption levels, population growth leads to the highest increase in total food production. The impact of technical change is amplified or mitigated by adaptations of land management intensities.
Palavras-Chave
Agricultural sector optimization; Engel curve; Food security; Income development; Irrigation water scarcity; Population growth \n