Abstract

Water, food, and energy security are the major climate risks of global warming. The Paris Agreement proposed an ambitious target of limiting the rise in global mean surface temperature to well below 20C, and preferably to 1.50C, compared to the pre-industrial era. However, the implication of this policy discourse on the agricultural system is imperative for ensuring food security in the face of global warming. This research focuses on understanding the changes in water availability and rice productivity under 1.50C global warming over a global rice-exporting semi-arid watershed in Central India. Towards this goal, the mean climate under 1.50C of global warming was computed for 21 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) Global Climate models (GCMs). For each GCM, the corresponding changes in blue-green water availability and rice productivity at 1.50C warming period were estimated under two global warming scenarios (SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5) based on the semi-distributed Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT). Results suggest that the green and blue water is projected to change by ~ -20% to 10 and ~ -50 to 20%, respectively. The rice yield is projected to reduce in the range of 5% to 50%, with an increase in local temperature (~10C) and a decrease in local precipitation (~20%) being the limiting factor. This study provides useful information on when the 1.50C global warming could reach and how it can affect the agricultural productivity of semi-arid watersheds across different global warming scenarios. This study will help develop appropriate strategies to reduce/alleviate the impacts of global warming and foster food security at the watershed-scale.   

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