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Summary:

Global warming is set to dramatically reshape agriculture, with up to half of the world’s food crop production at risk if temperatures rise beyond 1.5°C, according to a new study published in Nature Food.

Researchers at Aalto University analyzed how changes in temperature, precipitation, and aridity will affect 30 key food crops worldwide. Their findings reveal that low-latitude regions, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, will face the worst consequences, potentially losing nearly three-quarters of current production under extreme warming scenarios.

As climate conditions become unsuitable, staple crops like rice, maize, wheat, and potatoes will struggle to grow in many areas. At the same time, crop diversity will decline, reducing the range of available food sources and threatening food security. By contrast, mid- and high-latitude regions may retain their agricultural productivity, though crop varieties will shift. While warming could enable the cultivation of new crops in northern regions, challenges like pests and extreme weather events could offset these gains.

The researchers emphasize that mitigating climate change and adapting agricultural systems are both essential. Improving yields, reducing food waste, and breeding climate-resilient crops could help, but without action, global food security remains at serious risk.

Image: The map show change in the potential diversity of food crops in +2C global warming scenario as compared to the situation at present (%) (s. food crops, climate)
Change in the potential diversity of food crops in +2C global warming scenario as compared to the situation at present (%). Credit: Heikonen et.al 2025 | DOI: 10.1038/s43016-025-01135-w | Aalto University

World’s critical food crops at imminent risk from rising temperatures

Global food security could be notably impacted by a marked decline in crop diversity if temperatures rise by more than 1.5°C, reveals new research.

Global warming is already reshaping our daily lives, with storms, floods, wildfires and droughts around the world. As temperatures continue to rise, a third of global food production could be at risk. A new study offers a more precise picture of exactly where and how warming will affect our ability to grow food.

Researchers at Aalto University studied how future changes in temperature, precipitation and aridity will affect growing conditions of 30 major food crop species across the globe. They found that low-latitude regions face significantly worse consequences than mid- or high-latitudes. Depending on the level of warming, up to half of the crop production in low-latitude areas would be at risk as climate conditions become unsuitable for production. At the same time, those regions would also see a large drop in crop diversity.

“The loss of diversity means that the range of food crops available for cultivation could decrease significantly in certain areas. That would reduce food security and make it more difficult to get adequate calories and protein,” says Sara Heikonen, the doctoral researcher who led the study.

Up to half of the world’s food crop production may be affected

Warming will severely decrease the amount of global cropland available for staple crops –– rice, maize, wheat, potato and soybean –– which account for over two-thirds of the world’s food energy intake . In addition, “tropical root crops such as yam, which are key to food security in low-income regions, as well as cereals and pulses are particularly vulnerable. In sub-Saharan Africa, the region which would be impacted most, almost three quarters of current production is at risk if global warming exceeds 3°C,” Heikonen says.

By contrast, mid- and high-latitude areas will probably retain their productive land overall, though zones for specific crops will change. These areas are also likely to see an increase in crop diversity. “For example, the cultivation of temperate fruits, such as pears, could become more common in more northerly regions,” says Heikonen.

However, even if climatic conditions are favourable, other factors could hamper agriculture in these areas, says the study’s senior author, Professor Matti Kummu. “We showed that there’s climatic potential but, for example, warming might bring new pests and extreme weather events, which our model doesn’t include. So the situation isn’t really that black and white.”

Options for adaptation and mitigation

Many of the low-latitude regions threatened most by warming are already vulnerable in numerous ways. They face problems with food sufficiency, and economic and systemic forces make them less resilient than northern countries. Nevertheless, Kummu sees ways that these regions could, at least partly, meet the challenge.

“In many low latitude areas, especially in Africa, the yields are small compared to similar areas elsewhere in the world. They could get higher yields with access to fertilisers and irrigation as well as reducing food losses through the production and storage chain. However, ongoing global warming will add a lot of uncertainty to these estimates and probably even more actions are needed, such as crop selection and novel breeding,” he says. “But I always say that the modelling and analysis is the easy part –– understanding how to make the changes happen is the hardest part.”

While policy-makers in low-latitude countries should work to close those gaps, in mid- and high-latitude regions farmers and policy-makers need more flexibility, says Kummu. Warming will likely change which crops are grown in those areas, and further changes will come from the array of pressures on the global food system. Coping with those changes will require the ability to adjust and adapt as the consequences of climate change unfold.

“If we want to secure our food system in the future, we need to both mitigate climate change and adapt to its effects,” says Heikonen. “Even if the biggest changes are in equatorial regions, we will all feel the effects through the globalised food system. We need to act together to address these problems.”

Journal Reference:
Heikonen, S., Heino, M., Jalava, M. et al., ‘Climate change threatens crop diversity at low latitudes’, Nature Food (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43016-025-01135-w

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Aalto University
Featured image credit: LARIVE Frankie | Unsplash

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