USA - Midwest farms may suffer huge losses from intense heat

27.11.2018 365 views
The federal government’s latest report on climate change warns of specific dangers to Midwest agriculture production, which comprises a significant portion of the economies of Kansas and Missouri. Increasing temperatures and more extreme weather patterns such as flooding and drought will have serious consequences on crop and livestock production, according to the Fourth National Climate Assessment that was released the day after Thanksgiving. “Any change in the climate poses a major challenge to agriculture through increased rates of crop failure, reduced livestock productivity and altered rates of pressure from pests, weeds and diseases,” according to the report’s chapter on agriculture. “Rural communities, where economies are more tightly interconnected with agriculture than with other sectors, are particularly vulnerable to the agricultural volatility related to climate.” But the report, vetted by 13 government agencies, holds out hope that agriculture can adapt to climate change with “planting decisions, farming practices and the use of technology.” Blake Hurst, president of the Missouri Farm Bureau, said Monday the report was “pretty disturbing” but agreed that agricultural producers will have to meet the challenge. He said ongoing research into more resilient hybrid seeds would prove beneficial. “As farmers, we will do our best to adapt to changes in weather, as we always have,” Hurst said. But he also said U.S. attempts to respond to climate change will be counterbalanced by countries such as India and China aspiring to Western living standards. “I’m not optimistic that our trading partners will be willing to do all the things they have to do,” Hurst said. The report on agriculture distills four key messages: Food production will decline in areas of more frequent and prolonged drought. Shifting participation patterns associated with high temperatures will intensify wildfires, accelerate the depletion of water supplies for irrigation and expand the distribution and incidence of pests and diseases for crops and livestock. The degradation of critical soil and water resources will expand with runoff caused by extreme precipitation events. Increased frequency and intensity of high temperature extremes will contribute to heat exhaustion, heatstroke and heart attacks in people and in heat stress for livestock that will result in large economic losses. People in rural areas will be limited in their capacity to respond to the effects of climate change because of poverty and limitations of community resources. The climate assessment’s opening sentence flatly contradicts the skepticism of President Donald Trump, who withdrew the United States from the Paris climate accords. Source - https://www.kansascity.com
23.02.2026

Joint Partnership Brings Parametric Cover for Ecuador Agri Risks

Ecuador has contracted its first parametric agricultural insurance policies, benefitting up to 10,000 people in smallholder rice and maize farming households against extreme rainfall and drought-risk.

23.02.2026

South Korean farmers sue utility giant KEPCO over climate damage to crops

As harvest season approached last November, farmer Ma Yong-un walked through his apple orchard in southern South Korea with a growing sense of dread.

23.02.2026

Australia - CSIRO unveils new tool to help farmers measure environmental footprint

Farmers across Australia will be able to use FarmPrint to evaluate and communicate the environmental footprint of their agricultural production.

23.02.2026

How Japan is using tech and partnerships to protect its agriculture

As climate change accelerates and brings more frequent natural disasters and rising temperatures, agriculture worldwide is entering a period of profound transformation. 

23.02.2026

UK - Row breaks out over ‘disastrous’ chicken welfare plan

A charity official has claimed food industry plans to launch a new Sustainable Chicken Forum (SCF) are “disastrous” for animal welfare.

23.02.2026

Ghana - COA targets US$10m in investments for blue food sector through innovation hub

The Chamber of Aquaculture (COA) Ghana says it is targeting about $10million in investments for businesses in the blue food sector through the establishment of it Blue food innovation hub in ten years.

22.02.2026

India - Govt identifies L1 insurers for Restructured Weather Crop Insurance Scheme in J&K

Under the scheme, apple and saffron crops in Kashmir division and mango, litchi and saffron (Kishtwar only) in Jammu division will be covered under a weather-indexed model.

22.02.2026

India - Satellite images used to detect ₹217 crore irregularity in crop insurance claims

The probe, conducted in the second week of February, was prompted by an unusual surge in insurance applications for banana crops.