Economic feasibility of adapting crop enterprises to future climate change: a case study of flexible scheduling and irrigation for representative farms in Flathead Valley, Montana, USA

被引:0
作者
Zeyuan Qiu
Tony Prato
机构
[1] New Jersey Institute of Technology,Department of Chemistry and Environmental Science
[2] University of Missouri,Center of Applied Research and Environmental Systems, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
来源
Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change | 2012年 / 17卷
关键词
Agricultural adaptation; Climate change; Crop enterprises; Net return; Net farm income; EPIC; Flathead Valle;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Future climate change directly impacts crop agriculture by altering temperature and precipitation regimes, crop yields, crop enterprise net returns, and net farm income. Most previous studies assess the potential impacts of agricultural adaptation to climate change on crop yields. This study attempts to evaluate the potential impacts of crop producers’ adaptation to future climate change on crop yield, crop enterprise net returns, and net farm income in Flathead Valley, Montana, USA. Crop enterprises refer to the combinations of inputs (e.g., land, labor, and capital) and field operations used to produce a crop. Two crop enterprise adaptations are evaluated: flexible scheduling of field operations; and crop irrigation. All crop yields are simulated using the Environmental Policy Integrated Climate (EPIC) model. Net farm income is assessed for small and large representative farms and two soils in the study area. Results show that average crop yields in the future period (2006–2050) without adaptation are between 7% and 48% lower than in the historical period (1960–2005). Flexible scheduling of the operations used in crop enterprises does not appear to be an economically efficient form of crop enterprise adaptation because it does not improve crop yields and crop enterprise net returns in the future period. With irrigation, crop yields are generally higher for all crop enterprises and crop enterprise net returns increase for the canola and alfalfa enterprises but decrease for all other assessed crop enterprises relative to no adaptation. Overall, average crop enterprise net return in the future period is 45% lower with than without irrigation. Net farm income decreases for both the large and small representative farms with both flexible scheduling and irrigation. Results indicate that flexible scheduling and irrigation adaptation are unlikely to reduce the potential adverse economic impacts of climate change on crop producers in Montana’s Flathead Valley.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 242
页数:19
相关论文
共 90 条
  • [1] Antle JM(2004)Adaptation, spatial heterogeneity, and the vulnerability of agricultural systems to climate change and CO Clim Chang 64 289-315
  • [2] Capalbo S(2004) fertilization: an integrated assessment approach Clim Chang 67 119-141
  • [3] Elliott E(2008)Farm-level adaptation to climatic variability and change: crop diversification in the Canadian prairies Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 13 241-265
  • [4] Paustian KH(1997)Impacts of climate change and CO Agric For Meteorol 83 171-203
  • [5] Bradshaw B(2003) increase on agricultural production and adaptation options for Southern Quebec, Canada Agric For Meteorol 117 97-122
  • [6] Dolan H(2006)Sensitivity of crop yield and water use to change in a range of climatic factors and CO Ecol Model 192 362-384
  • [7] Smit B(1993) concentrations: a simulation study applying EPIC to the central USA American Journal of Agricultural Economics 75 387-398
  • [8] Brassard JP(1997)Integrated assessment of Hadley Centre (HadCM2) climate-change impacts on agricultural productivity and irrigation water supply in the conterminous United States. Part II. Regional agricultural production in 030 and 095 Agric For Meteorol 85 87-98
  • [9] Singh B(1999)Simulating soil C dynamics with EPIC: model description and testing against long-term data Outlook Agr 28 19-28
  • [10] Brown RA(2007)A farm-level analysis of economic and agronomic impacts of gradual climate warming Bull Am Meteorol Soc 88 1383-1394