Abstract
Abstract. Feeding a growing population with global natural-resource constraints
becomes an increasingly challenging task. Changing spatial cropping patterns
could contribute to sustaining crop production and mitigating water scarcity.
Previous studies on water saving through international food trade focussed
either on comparing water productivities among food-trading countries or
on analysing food trade in relation to national water endowments. Here,
we consider, for the first time, how both differences in national average
water productivities and water endowments can be considered to analyse
comparative advantages of countries for different types of crop production.
A linear-optimization algorithm is used to find modifications in global
cropping patterns that reduce national blue water scarcity in the world's
most severely water-scarce countries, while keeping global production of
each crop unchanged and preventing any increase in total irrigated or
rainfed harvested areas in each country. The results are used to assess
national comparative advantages and disadvantages for different crops. Even
when allowing a maximum expansion of the irrigated or rainfed harvested area per
crop per country of only 10 %, the blue water scarcity in the world's most
water-scarce countries can be greatly reduced. In this case, we could
achieve a reduction of the global blue water footprint of crop production of
21 % and a decrease of the global total harvested and irrigated areas of
2 % and 10 % respectively. Shifts in rainfed areas have a dominant
share in reducing the blue water footprint of crop production.
Funder
H2020 European Research Council
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
Cited by
41 articles.
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