Over the past several decades, maize yields in the US Midwest have risen at about 17% per decade as a result of steady technological progress. Although the trend is expected to remain positive, climate change is expected to have an increasing countervailing effect. In this chapter, I compute the yield growth rates necessary to fully offset the potential negative effects of a warming climate. Relying on a statistical model allowing for nonlinear effects of temperature on yield, I find that maize yields would decrease by −4.2, −21.8 and −46.1% around the trend, under uniform warming scenarios of 1 °C, 3 °C and 5 °C, respectively. I find that an increase of 6.6%/decade in maize yields is required to fully offset the detrimental effects of a severe but still plausible 3 °C warming in the next three decades. This indicates that future maize yield trends could - all else equal - be substantially curtailed due to the climate change. This case study illustrates how agricultural policy analysts can assess the magnitude of potential climate change impacts relative to historical yield trends to help identify targets for agricultural research.
CITATION STYLE
Ortiz-Bobea, A. (2018). U.S. Maize yield growth and countervailing climate change impacts. In Natural Resource Management and Policy (Vol. 52, pp. 161–172). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61194-5_8
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