Abstract

In order to achieve worldwide food security, there is a focus on sustainable intensification of crop production. This requires sustainable irrigation water use for irrigated croplands, as irrigation withdrawals are already resulting in groundwater exploitation and unmet ecosystem water requirements. Our study aims to quantify attainable wheat, maize, rice and soybean production on currently irrigated cropland under sustainable water use. Attainable production accounts for increases in nutrient application, while limiting irrigation withdrawals to renewable water availability and without compromising river ecosystem water requirements. Attainable production was quantified using a newly developed two-way coupled hydrological model and crop model. This model framework could comprehensively simulate biophysical processes related to water availability and crop growth under water and nutrient limitations. Our results indicate worldwide crop nitrogen uptake should increase by 20%, to achieve production gap closure. However, worldwide irrigation withdrawals should decrease by more than a third in order to ensure sustainable water use. Under these constraints, a total (all crops) production decrease of 5% was estimated, compared to currently achievable production. Moreover, achievable irrigated crop production in the extensively irrigated croplands of northeastern China, Pakistan and northwestern India would be reduced by up to a third. On the other hand, increases in achievable irrigated crop production may be possible in regions such as southern America, eastern Europe and central Africa. However, in these regions currently only a small fraction of crops is irrigated. Our results imply that intensification on currently irrigated croplands is at odds with sustainable water management, and further locally-oriented research is needed to assess suitable water management options and solutions.

Highlights

  • In order to achieve worldwide food security, sufficient food should be available all year round

  • world food studies crop model (WOFOST) has been used extensively in studies ranging from monitoring and predicting yields [45,46,47,48,49] to estimating the effects of climate change and management strategies on crop growth [50,51,52,53]

  • Our study aims to quantify the impact of worldwide water constraints on attainable irrigated crop production

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Summary

Introduction

In order to achieve worldwide food security (sustainable development goal 2; [1]), sufficient food should be available all year round. Up to double of the 2005 worldwide crop production is needed to satisfy the food demands of a growing and more prosperous population by 2050 [2,3,4] To achieve these goals, many studies have focused on (sustainably) intensifying agriculture in order to increase crop production [5,6,7]. Several studies have indicated that there is still a large gap between actual and potential crop production (the production gap). This gap could be closed through improved water and nutrient management [9,10,11]

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