PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Agricultural trade across US states can mitigate economic impacts of climate change

Agricultural trade across US states can mitigate economic impacts of climate change
2021-04-15
(Press-News.org) URBANA, Ill. - Agricultural producers deal firsthand with changing weather conditions, and extreme events such as drought or flooding can impact their productivity and profit. Climate change models project such events will occur more often in the future. But studies of the economic consequences of weather and climate on agriculture typically focus on local impacts only.

A new study from the University of Illinois looks at how changes in weather - including extreme events - may decrease crop profit in one state while increasing profits in other states. The secret ingredient: U.S. interstate trade. It is expected to mitigate the economic impact of climate change by up to $14.5 billion by the middle of the century.

"Our motivation for the study is twofold: Climate change brings about more frequent and intense extreme weather events, which impact agricultural production. At the same time, U.S. and global populations are growing. We need to plan for an additional 64 million people in the U.S. and 1.9 billion people worldwide by 2050, which raises concerns for future food security," says Sandy Dall'Erba, professor in the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics (ACE) and director of the Regional Economics Applications Laboratory (REAL) at U of I. Dall'Erba is lead author on the study, published in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics.

Researchers typically have a dire view of extreme weather effects on agricultural production. For instance, the 2012 drought in the Midwest reduced corn production by 20% in Iowa, 34% in Illinois, and 16% in Nebraska compared to the previous year. This had a disastrous impact on crop producer profits in these states.

"However, crop producers in states that did not experience drought at all or to a much smaller extent, like Minnesota, saw record profits," Dall'Erba notes. "This is because the price of crops went up that year, and the food supply chain, from livestock in Louisiana and Texas to food processing plants throughout the country, needed the raw products to carry on with their activities. As a result, drought events outside of your own state can benefit you."

Dall'Erba and study co-authors Zhangliang Chen and Noé Nava, graduate students in ACE, conducted their research within the U.S. because the country is so large that a particular weather event is unlikely to affect every state simultaneously.

"Furthermore, U.S. interstate trade has been relatively understudied - in part because data were not available until recently - even though we use around 90% of agricultural products domestically, for livestock and food processing," Dall'Erba says.

The researchers analyzed trade flows between U.S. states, based on data from the U.S. Economic Census Bureau's commodity flow survey at four time points: 1997, 2002, 2007 and 2012. They focused on crop and vegetable trade because these commodities, unlike livestock and food processing, are directly affected by weather events.

As expected, they found drought reduces the capacity of a state to sell its commodities to other states, while it increases the state's demand for imports of crops, fruits, and vegetables from other states.

"You see how a drought event affects not only yourself, but also all the places you export to and all the places you import from. The reason is that activities down the value chain, such as livestock feeding, food manufacturing, and human consumption carry on at the same level so if people cannot get their raw products from their usual producer state, they will get them from another state," Dall'Erba notes.

While agricultural profits are very sensitive to weather-induced changes in trade, not all states will experience the effects equally. Some states depend on trade more than others; for example, Illinois, Minnesota, California, and Nebraska are the largest importers and exporters in the domestic trade system, Dall'Erba explains.

The authors also projected future weather conditions based on four commonly used global and regional climate models.

"Without trade, the climate change impact forecast indicates a loss of $11.2 billion in agricultural profits at the national level by 2050. That estimate accounts only for the negative impact of a local drought, which is how current impact forecasts are usually done. However, when we include trade in the analysis, we discover that its capacity to mitigate climate change is worth $14.5 billion. This means we project a $3.3 billion gain nationwide. It's a complete shift in paradigm compared to current forecasts," Dall'Erba states.

Dall'Erba and his research team are working on a website that will allow anyone to explore the data for themselves. Users can enter information about states, crops, weather, and trade to create their own forecasts and estimates.

While the current project focuses on U.S. interstate trade, Dall'Erba says the approach can also apply to global weather events and international trade as well as other sources of disruption in the supply chain such as diplomatic events or infrastructure vulnerability.

INFORMATION:

The Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics and the Regional Economics Applications Laboratory (REAL) are in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois.

The article, "U.S. Interstate Trade Will Mitigate the Negative Impact of ClimateChange on Crop Profit," is published in American Journal of Agricultural Economics. [https://doi.org/10.1111/ajae.12204] Authors include Sandy Dall'Erba, Zhangliang Chen, and Noé Nava. [https://doi.org/10.1111/ajae.12204]

Funding for the research was provided by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Agricultural trade across US states can mitigate economic impacts of climate change

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nuclear DNA from sediments helps unlock ancient human history

Nuclear DNA from sediments helps unlock ancient human history
2021-04-15
The field of ancient DNA has revealed important aspects of our evolutionary past, including our relationships with our distant cousins, Denisovans and Neandertals. These studies have relied on DNA from bones and teeth, which store DNA and protect it from the environment. But such skeletal remains are exceedingly rare, leaving large parts of human history inaccessible to genetic analysis. To fill these gaps, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology developed new methods for enriching and analyzing human nuclear DNA from sediments, which are abundant at almost every archaeological site. Until now, only ...

The Internet brings people into big cities, new study suggests

2021-04-15
The widespread proliferation of the internet and information and communication technologies (ICT) has drawn people into urban centres, according to new research. Despite being able to access data at the drop of a hat or speak face-to-face to people on the other side of the world, the evolution of technological capabilities hasn't led to an exodus from cities. In fact experts at the University of Bristol have found quite the opposite; that the increased adoption of ICT has resulted in national urban systems - cities within a country - that are characterised by higher population concentrations. ...

Latest Neuropixels probes can track neurons over weeks

2021-04-15
A new generation of miniature recording probes can track the same neurons inside tiny mouse brains over weeks -- and even months. The new tools build on the success of the original Neuropixels probes released in 2017 and currently used in more than 400 labs. Neuropixels 2.0 are much smaller -- about a third the size of their predecessors. They're designed to record the electrical activity from more individual neurons and have the unique ability to track this activity over extended time periods. That makes them especially useful for studying long-term phenomena like learning and memory in small animals such as mice, says Tim Harris, a senior fellow at HHMI's Janelia Research Campus who led the project. Harris and his colleagues describe the advance in a paper published online ...

UCI-led study uses plankton genomes as global biosensors of ocean ecosystem stress

2021-04-15
Irvine, Calif., -- By analyzing gains and losses in the genes of phytoplankton samples collected in all major ocean regions, researchers at the University of California, Irvine have created the most nuanced and high-resolution map yet to show where these photosynthetic organisms either thrive or are forced to adapt to limited quantities of key nutrients, nitrogen, phosphorus and iron. As part of the new Bio-GO-SHIP initiative, the UCI scientists made eight deployments on six different research vessels, spending 228 days at sea in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans. They generated nearly 1,000 ocean metagenomes from 930 locations around the globe, with an average distance between collection points at 26.5 kilometers (about 16.5 miles). ...

Process simultaneously removes toxic metals and salt to produce clean water

Process simultaneously removes toxic metals and salt to produce clean water
2021-04-15
University of California, Berkeley, chemists have discovered a way to simplify the removal of toxic metals. like mercury and boron. during desalination to produce clean water, while at the same time potentially capturing valuable metals, such as gold. Desalination -- the removal of salt -- is only one step in the process of producing drinkable water, or water for agriculture or industry, from ocean or waste water. Either before or after the removal of salt, the water often has to be treated to remove boron, which is toxic to plants, and heavy metals like arsenic and mercury, which are toxic to humans. Often, the process leaves ...

The Hunger Games: Uncovering the secret of the hunger switch in the brain

2021-04-15
Being constantly hungry, no matter how much you eat - that's the daily struggle of people with genetic defects in the brain's appetite controls, and it often ends in severe obesity. In a study published in Science on April 15, researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, together with colleagues from the Queen Mary University of London and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, have revealed the mechanism of action of the master switch for hunger in the brain: the melanocortin receptor 4, or MC4 receptor for short. They have also clarified how this switch is activated by setmelanotide (Imcivree), ...

Oxygen migration enables ferroelectricity on nanoscale

Oxygen migration enables ferroelectricity on nanoscale
2021-04-15
Hafnium-based thin films, with a thickness of only a few nanometres, show an unconventional form of ferroelectricity. This allows the construction of nanometre-sized memories or logic devices. However, it was not clear how ferroelectricity could occur at this scale. A study that was led by scientists from the University of Groningen showed how atoms move in a hafnium-based capacitor: migrating oxygen atoms (or vacancies) are responsible for the observed switching and storage of charge. The results, which were published online by the journal Science on 15 April, point the way to new ferroelectric materials. Ferroelectric ...

Mathematical method builds synthetic hearts to identify how heart shape could be linked to disease

2021-04-15
Researchers from King's College London have created 3D replicas of full-sized healthy adult hearts from Computed Tomography (CT) images and analyzed how cardiac shape relates to function. Published today in PLOS Computational Biology, the study also includes 1000 new synthetic hearts that have been made open access allowing researchers to download and use them to test new algorithms, test in-silico therapies, run more statistical analyses or generate specific shapes from the average models. Statistical shape analysis is a technique that allows the rigorous study of the anatomical changes of the heart across different subjects. Using this technique, from a cohort of 20 healthy adult hearts the researchers created an average heart and ...

Penn study suggests those who had COVID-19 may only need one vaccine dose

2021-04-15
PHILADELPHIA--People who have recovered from COVID-19 had a robust antibody response after the first mRNA vaccine dose, but little immune benefit after the second dose, according to new research from the Penn Institute of Immunology. The findings, published today in Science Immunology, suggest only a single vaccine dose may be needed to produce a sufficient antibody response. The team found that those who did not have COVID-19--called COVID naïve--did not have a full immune response until after receiving their second vaccine dose, reinforcing the importance of completing the two recommended doses for achieving strong levels of immunity. The study provides more insight on the underlying immunobiology of mRNA vaccines, ...

A more complete account

2021-04-15
Even the mention of parasites can be enough to make some people's skin crawl. But to recent UC Santa Barbara doctoral graduate Dana Morton these creepy critters occupy important ecological niches, fulfilling roles that, in her opinion, have too often been overlooked. That's why Morton has just released the most extensive ecological food web that includes parasites. Eight years in the making, the dataset includes over 21,000 interactions between 942 species, all thoroughly annotated. The detailed description, published in the journal Scientific Data, is a boon for basic research, conservation efforts and resource management. Understanding ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rock solid evidence: Angola geology reveals prehistoric split between South America and Africa

Life expectancy in two disadvantaged areas higher than expected

Dynamic DNA structures and the formation of memory

STEMM Opportunity Alliance releases national strategy at White House summit to diversify and expand STEMM workforce by 2050

Calcium can protect potato plants from bacterial wilt

Virtual reality environment for teens may offer an accessible, affordable way to reduce stress

Join us in honoring the 2024 American Gastroenterological Association Recognition Awards recipients

Resource-appropriate cancer care, including coexisting health issues of HIV and cancer, to be addressed during meeting in Nairobi

Marriage of synthetic biology and 3D printing produces programmable living materials

Friends with health benefits: How the buddy system pays off when pursuing goals

Novel genetic plant regeneration approach without the application of phytohormones

ACS inaugural report shows mortality for preventable cancers among native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islanders in U.S. is 2-3 times as high as white people

ChatGPT fails at heart risk assessment

Improved AI process could better predict water supplies

A blood test for stroke risk? Study finds network of inflammatory molecules may act as biomarker for risk of future cerebrovascular disease

New survey finds 75% of Americans feel mental health takes back seat to physical health within U.S. healthcare system

Brief anger may impair blood vessel function

Science advisors unite in a call for greater variety of evidence in developing policy

New Japanese lily species identified, 1st addition to sukashiyuri group in 110 years

The popular kids in school may be sleeping less

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis have unique and complex autoantibody patterns

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ hospital safety grade from The Leapfrog Group 

Survey finds young adults more likely to believe myths about sun protection and skin cancer prevention

Time zones and tiredness strongly influence NBA results, study of 25,000 matches shows

Premature menopause linked to increased musculoskeletal pain and likelihood of sarcopenia

Women are 40% more likely to experience depression during the perimenopause

World’s highest observatory explores the universe

$27 million to map 50 million human cells and uncover genetic fingerprints of disease

Validated rules help prevent overuse of CT scans for diagnosing traumatic head and abdominal injuries in kids

Closing the U.S./Mexico border during COVID-19 increased HIV transmission

[Press-News.org] Agricultural trade across US states can mitigate economic impacts of climate change