By Megan Rowling
BARCELONA, March 7
(Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Without action to help farmers adjust to
changing climate conditions, it will become impossible to grow some staple food
crops in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, with maize, beans and bananas most at
risk, researchers said on Monday.
In a study of how global
warming will affect nine crops that make up half the region's food production,
scientists found that up to 30 percent of areas growing maize and bananas, and
up to 60 percent of those producing beans could become unviable by the end of
the century.
Women sort beans as they prepare a meal in Kasese District,Uganda.REUTERS/James Akena |
Six of the nine crops -
cassava, groundnut, pearl millet, finger millet, sorghum and yam - are
projected to remain stable under moderate and extreme climate change scenarios.
"This study tells
where, and crucially when, interventions need to be made to stop climate change
destroying vital food supplies in Africa," said Julian Ramirez-Villegas,
the study's lead author who works with the CGIAR Research Program on Climate
Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
"We know what needs
to be done, and for the first time, we now have deadlines for taking
action," he added in a statement.
For example, the study
warns that around 40 percent of maize-growing areas will require
"transformation", which could mean changing the type of crop grown,
or in extreme cases even abandoning crop farming.
Sorghum and millet, which
have higher tolerance to drought and heat, could replace maize in most places
under threat.
But for 0.5 percent of
maize-growing areas - equal to 0.8 million hectares in South Africa that now
produce 2.7 million tonnes - there is no viable crop substitution, the study
said.
In a few places, the need
to adapt to climate change is already urgent, the researchers said. Those
include pockets in highly climate-exposed areas of the Sahel in Guinea, Gambia,
Senegal, Burkina Faso and Niger.
Banana-growing regions of
West Africa, including areas in Ghana and Benin, will need to act within the
next decade, as the land is expected to become unsuitable for bananas by 2025.
And maize-growing areas
of Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Tanzania also have less than 10 years left
to change tack under the most extreme climate change scenarios, the study
added.
"If we don't do
anything now, farmers are no longer going to be able to grow certain crops in
certain sites," Ramirez-Villegas told the Thomson Reuters Foundation from
Colombia.
"But we know there
are several adaptation options ... with which farmers should be able to carry
on growing these crops for a longer period of time than we project."
Read the full story
at Building
Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED).
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