Climate Change Risks for the Mediterranean Agri-Food Sector: The Case of Greece

Author:

Georgopoulou Elena1ORCID,Gakis Nikos2,Kapetanakis Dimitris2ORCID,Voloudakis Dimitris3ORCID,Markaki Maria4ORCID,Sarafidis Yannis1,Lalas Dimitris P.2,Laliotis George P.5ORCID,Akamati Konstantina5ORCID,Bizelis Iosif5,Daskalakis Markos3,Mirasgedis Sevastianos1ORCID,Tzamtzis Iordanis6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Environmental Research & Sustainable Development, National Observatory of Athens, I. Metaxa & Vas. Pavlou, GR-15236 Palea Penteli, Greece

2. FACE3TS S.A., Agiou Isidorou 1, GR-11471 Athens, Greece

3. RethinkAg S.P., Eirinis 81, Agia Paraskevi, GR-15341 Attiki, Greece

4. Department of Management Science & Technology, Hellenic Mediterranean University, P.O. Box 128, GR-72100 Agios Nikolaos Crete, Greece

5. Laboratory of Animal Breeding & Husbandry, Department of Animal Science, School of Animal Sciences, Agricultural University of Athens, 75, Iera Odos Str., GR-11855 Athens, Greece

6. Accel Ltd., Chrisostomou Smirnis 27, Imittos, GR-17237 Athens, Greece

Abstract

The study assesses the direct effects of climate change by 2060, including extreme events, on the productivity of regional crop farming and livestock in Greece, and the broader socio-economic effects on the agri-food and other sectors. Different approaches (i.e., agronomic models, statistical regression models, and equations linking thermal stress to livestock output) were combined to estimate the effects on productivity from changes in the average values of climatic parameters, and subsequently the direct economic effects from this long-term climate change. Recorded damages from extreme events together with climatic thresholds per event and crop were combined to estimate the direct economic effects of these extremes. The broader socio-economic effects were then estimated through input–output analysis. Under average levels of future extreme events, the total direct economic losses for Greek agriculture due to climate change will be significant, from EUR 437 million/year to EUR 1 billion/year. These losses approximately double when indirect effects on other sectors using agricultural products as inputs (e.g., food and beverage, hotels, and restaurants) are considered, and escalate further under a tenfold impact of extreme events. Losses in the GDP and employment are moderate at the national level, but significant in regions where the contribution of agriculture is high.

Funder

Piraeus Financial Holdings S.A.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference111 articles.

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