UNB, Dhaka :
More than half a million people worldwide, including Bangladesh, are likely to die annually by 2050 because of the impact on agriculture of changing climate, according to an Oxford University study on the future of food.
The authors say the effects are likely to be felt most acutely in South and East Asia, but that the US will also be severely affected. Reduced production of fruit and vegetables as climate change impacts on agriculture could substantially increase dietary and weight-related factors that contribute to so many deaths worldwide, according to a message received here.
They identify reduced production and consumption of fruit and vegetables as a key concern, and say the effects of climate change on agriculture could be one of its most important consequences. The World Health Organisation recommends that adults should normally eat at least 400 grams of fruit and vegetables daily, which unlike processed foods are low in energy
and do not promote obesity. Red and processed meat consumption has been linked to some forms of cancer, according to Climate News Network.
While there has been extensive research on food security, there has been less on assessing the wider health impacts of future changes in agricultural production.
The study, published in the UK medical journal The Lancet, links a detailed agricultural modelling framework – the International Model for Policy Analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) – to a comparative risk assessment of changes in consumption of fruit and vegetables and red meat, and bodyweight for deaths from coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer, and a range of other causes.
The authors calculated the change in the number of deaths attributable to climate-related changes in weight and diets for the combination of four emissions pathways (one high, one low and two medium) and three socio-economic pathways (sustainable development, middle of the road, and more fragmented development).
The model projects that, by 2050, climate change will lead to per-person reductions of 3.2 percent in global food availability. Consumption of red meat is projected to fall by 0.7 percent, but that of fruit and vegetables by 4 percent. These changes will be associated with 529,000 annual climate-related deaths worldwide.
The model suggests 248,000 people will die each year in China by 2050 because of climate- linked decreases in food production. India faces a yearly loss of 160,000 people, with Vietnam, Bangladesh and the US next in line.
Marco Springmann, lead author of the study and post-doctoral researcher in the department of population health at the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food, says that nations’ mortality rates and the magnitude of climate and yield shocks had to be taken into account. “The US comes in fifth because of its high population and its vulnerability to climate shocks,” he explains. Twice as many climate-related deaths were associated in the study with reductions in fruit and vegetable consumption as with climate-related increases in the prevalence of underweight.
More than half a million people worldwide, including Bangladesh, are likely to die annually by 2050 because of the impact on agriculture of changing climate, according to an Oxford University study on the future of food.
The authors say the effects are likely to be felt most acutely in South and East Asia, but that the US will also be severely affected. Reduced production of fruit and vegetables as climate change impacts on agriculture could substantially increase dietary and weight-related factors that contribute to so many deaths worldwide, according to a message received here.
They identify reduced production and consumption of fruit and vegetables as a key concern, and say the effects of climate change on agriculture could be one of its most important consequences. The World Health Organisation recommends that adults should normally eat at least 400 grams of fruit and vegetables daily, which unlike processed foods are low in energy
and do not promote obesity. Red and processed meat consumption has been linked to some forms of cancer, according to Climate News Network.
While there has been extensive research on food security, there has been less on assessing the wider health impacts of future changes in agricultural production.
The study, published in the UK medical journal The Lancet, links a detailed agricultural modelling framework – the International Model for Policy Analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) – to a comparative risk assessment of changes in consumption of fruit and vegetables and red meat, and bodyweight for deaths from coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer, and a range of other causes.
The authors calculated the change in the number of deaths attributable to climate-related changes in weight and diets for the combination of four emissions pathways (one high, one low and two medium) and three socio-economic pathways (sustainable development, middle of the road, and more fragmented development).
The model projects that, by 2050, climate change will lead to per-person reductions of 3.2 percent in global food availability. Consumption of red meat is projected to fall by 0.7 percent, but that of fruit and vegetables by 4 percent. These changes will be associated with 529,000 annual climate-related deaths worldwide.
The model suggests 248,000 people will die each year in China by 2050 because of climate- linked decreases in food production. India faces a yearly loss of 160,000 people, with Vietnam, Bangladesh and the US next in line.
Marco Springmann, lead author of the study and post-doctoral researcher in the department of population health at the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food, says that nations’ mortality rates and the magnitude of climate and yield shocks had to be taken into account. “The US comes in fifth because of its high population and its vulnerability to climate shocks,” he explains. Twice as many climate-related deaths were associated in the study with reductions in fruit and vegetable consumption as with climate-related increases in the prevalence of underweight.