1. Re-examining the impact of annual weather fluctuations on global livestock production.
- Author
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Emediegwu, Lotanna E. and Ubabukoh, Chisom L.
- Subjects
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LIVESTOCK productivity , *BEEF industry , *RAINFALL , *PRODUCTION increases , *CLIMATE change , *WEATHER - Abstract
Attempts to analyze the effect of weather shocks on livestock production have been carried out using integrated assessment models (IAMs) or the cross-sectional (Ricardian) method. However, these methodologies are fraught with obvious shortcomings, such as omitted variable bias, amongst others. This paper, therefore, re-examines the relationship between weather changes and global livestock production using an established econometric strategy that takes care of the pitfalls inherent in the conventional approaches. Using country-level data and a variety of specifications, we find that a 1 °C increase in temperature will lead to a 9.7% reduction in global beef production on average. These adverse effects are amplified in hot, poor, and agriculture-dependent countries. Besides, we find that a marginal increase in annual precipitation would lead to a 2.1% increase in beef production in tropical countries but a 1.9% decrease in temperate ones. Also, our forecasts show that climate change will reduce animal output by a further 20% in the mid-century and an additional 40% by the end of the century assuming no adaptation other than the degree of adaptation observed in the historical period. • Temperature and precipitation affect global livestock production nonlinearly • The effect of warming is amplified in hot, poor, and agriculture-dependent countries • Rise in rainfall appears to be more favorable to livestock production in the tropics • Future weather projections suggest a further drop in global livestock production [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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