By Justin Gillis, NY Times, June 4, 2011
CIUDAD OBREGÓN, Mexico—The dun wheat field spreading out at Ravi P. Singh’s feet offered a possible clue to human destiny. Baked by a desert sun and deliberately starved of water, the plants were parched and nearly dead.
CIUDAD OBREGÓN, Mexico—The dun wheat field spreading out at Ravi P. Singh’s feet offered a possible clue to human destiny. Baked by a desert sun and deliberately starved of water, the plants were parched and nearly dead.
Dr. Singh, a wheat breeder, grabbed seed heads that  should have been plump with the staff of life. His practiced fingers  found empty husks.
“You’re not going to feed the people with that,” he said.
But then, over in Plot 88, his eyes settled on a  healthier plant, one that had managed to thrive in spite of the drought,  producing plump kernels of wheat. “This is beautiful!” he shouted as  wheat beards rustled in the wind.
Hope in a stalk of grain: It is a hope the world  needs these days, for the great agricultural system that feeds the human  race is in trouble.
The rapid growth in farm output that defined the  late 20th century has slowed to the point that it is failing to keep up  with the demand for food, driven by population increases and rising  affluence in once-poor countries.
Consumption of the four staples that supply most  human calories—wheat, rice, corn and soybeans—has outstripped production  for much of the past decade, drawing once-large stockpiles down to  worrisome levels. The imbalance between supply and demand has resulted  in two huge spikes in international grain prices since 2007, with some  grains more than doubling in cost.
Those price jumps, though felt only moderately in  the West, have worsened hunger for tens of millions of poor people,  destabilizing politics in scores of countries, from Mexico to Uzbekistan  to Yemen. The Haitian government was ousted in 2008 amid food riots,  and anger over high prices has played a role in the recent Arab  uprisings.
Now, the latest scientific research suggests that a  previously discounted factor is helping to destabilize the food system:  climate change.
Many of the failed harvests of the past decade were  a consequence of weather disasters, like floods in the United States,  drought in Australia and blistering heat waves in Europe and Russia.  Scientists believe some, though not all, of those events were caused or  worsened by human-induced global warming.
Temperatures are rising rapidly during the growing  season in some of the most important agricultural countries, and a paper  published several weeks ago found that this had shaved several  percentage points off potential yields, adding to the price gyrations.
For nearly two decades, scientists had predicted  that climate change would be relatively manageable for agriculture,  suggesting that even under worst-case assumptions, it would probably  take until 2080 for food prices to double.
In part, they were counting on a counterintuitive  ace in the hole: that rising carbon dioxide levels, the primary  contributor to global warming, would act as a powerful plant fertilizer  and offset many of the ill effects of climate change.
Until a few years ago, these assumptions went  largely unchallenged. But lately, the destabilization of the food system  and the soaring prices have rattled many leading scientists.
“The success of agriculture has been astounding,”  said Cynthia Rosenzweig, a researcher at NASA who helped pioneer the  study of climate change and agriculture. “But I think there’s starting  to be premonitions that it may not continue forever.”
A scramble is on to figure out whether climate  science has been too sanguine about the risks. Some researchers,  analyzing computer forecasts that are used to advise governments on  future crop prospects, are pointing out what they consider to be gaping  holes. These include a failure to consider the effects of extreme  weather, like the floods and the heat waves that are increasing as the  earth warms.
A rising unease about the future of the world’s  food supply came through during interviews this year with more than 50  agricultural experts working in nine countries.
These experts say that in coming decades, farmers  need to withstand whatever climate shocks come their way while roughly  doubling the amount of food they produce to meet rising demand. And they  need to do it while reducing the considerable environmental damage  caused by the business of agriculture.
Agronomists emphasize that the situation is far  from hopeless. Examples are already available, from the deserts of  Mexico to the rice paddies of India, to show that it may be possible to  make agriculture more productive and more resilient in the face of  climate change. Farmers have achieved huge gains in output in the past,  and rising prices are a powerful incentive to do so again.
But new crop varieties and new techniques are  required, far beyond those available now, scientists said. Despite the  urgent need, they added, promised financing has been slow to  materialize, much of the necessary work has yet to begin and, once it  does, it is likely to take decades to bear results.
“There’s just such a tremendous disconnect, with  people not understanding the highly dangerous situation we are in,” said  Marianne Bänziger, deputy chief of the International Maize and Wheat  Improvement Center, a leading research institute in Mexico.
A wheat physiologist at the center, Matthew  Reynolds, fretted over the potential consequences of not attacking the  problem vigorously.
“What a horrible world it will be if food really  becomes short from one year to the next,” he said. “What will that do to  society?”
Sitting with a group of his fellow wheat farmers,  Francisco Javier Ramos Bours voiced a suspicion. Water shortages had  already arrived in recent years for growers in his region, the Yaqui  Valley, which sits in the Sonoran Desert of northwestern Mexico. In his  view, global climate change could well be responsible.
“All the world is talking about it,” Mr. Ramos said as the other farmers nodded.
Farmers everywhere face rising difficulties: water  shortages as well as flash floods. Their crops are afflicted by emerging  pests and diseases and by blasts of heat beyond anything they remember.
In a recent interview on the far side of the world,  in northeastern India, a rice farmer named Ram Khatri Yadav offered his  own complaint about the changing climate. “It will not rain in the  rainy season, but it will rain in the nonrainy season,” he said. “The  cold season is also shrinking.”
Experts are starting to fear that the era of cheap  food may be over. “Our mindset was surpluses,” said Dan Glickman, a  former United States secretary of agriculture. “That has just changed  overnight.”
 Forty years ago, a third of the  population in the developing world was undernourished. By the tail end  of the Green Revolution, in the mid-1990s, the share had fallen below 20  percent, and the absolute number of hungry people dipped below 800  million for the first time in modern history.
But the recent price spikes have helped cause the  largest increases in world hunger in decades. The Food and Agriculture  Organization of the United Nations estimated the number of hungry people  at 925 million last year, and the number is expected to be higher when a  fresh estimate is completed this year. The World Bank says the figure  could be as high as 940 million.
 
