Making the Paris agreement climate targets consistent with food security objectives

Publication date

2019

Authors

Doelman, JonathanORCID 0000-0002-6842-573XISNI 0000000492496647
Stehfest, ElkeORCID 0000-0003-3016-2679ISNI 0000000389405241
Tabeau, Andrzej
van Meijl, Hans

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Climate change mitigation is crucial to limit detrimental impacts of climate change on food production. However, cost-optimal mitigation pathways consistent with the Paris agreement project large-scale land-based mitigation for bio-energy and afforestation to achieve stringent climate targets. Land demand from land-based mitigation leads to competition with food production, raising concerns that climate policy (SDG13 – climate action) conflicts with food security objectives (SDG2 – zero hunger). In this study we use the computable general equilibrium model MAGNET and the IMAGE integrated assessment model to quantify the food security effects of large-scale land-based mitigation. Subsequently, we implement two measures to prevent reduced food security: increased agricultural intensification and reduced meat consumption. We show that large-scale land-based mitigation (∼600 Mha in 2050) leads to increased food prices (11%), reduced food availability (230 kcal/cap/day) and substantially more people at risk of hunger (230 million) compared to the baseline scenario in 2050, most notably in developing regions. Land-based mitigation also leads to yield increases (9%) and intensified ruminant production (11%). Additional crop yield improvement (9%) and intensification in ruminant production (3%) could prevent the negative effect of mitigation on food security. Introducing a reduction in meat consumption in high- and middle-income regions reduces required crop yield improvement (7%) and ruminant intensification (2%). Our study highlights the importance of transparency about food security effects in climate change mitigation scenarios. In addition, it provides an example of explicitly including measures to limit negative trade-offs in mitigation scenarios. In this way, we show how the Paris agreement can be made consistent with food security objectives and how multiple Sustainable Development Goals can be achieved.

Keywords

Agricultural intensification, Climate change, Diet change, Food security, Land-based mitigation, Taverne, Food Science, Ecology, Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality, Safety Research, SDG 2 - Zero Hunger, SDG 13 - Climate Action, SDG 15 - Life on Land, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 17 - Partnerships for the Goals

Citation

Doelman, J C, Stehfest, E, Tabeau, A & van Meijl, H 2019, 'Making the Paris agreement climate targets consistent with food security objectives', Global Food Security, vol. 23, pp. 93-103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2019.04.003