The Climate-Grain Production Relationship Quantified

Guest essay by David Archibald

There is now consensus that the Sun has now entered a quiet period. The first paper from the solar physics community predicting the current quiet period was Schatten and Tobiska’s 2003 paper “Solar Activity Heading for a Maunder Minimum?”. To date, Solar Cycle 24 has shown similar maximum SSN amplitudes to that of Solar Cycle 5, the first half of the Dalton Minimum:

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Figure 1: Solar Cycle 24 relative to the Dalton Minimum

But what comes beyond that? Predicting the amplitude of Solar Cycle 24 was big business in the solar physics community with a total of 75 forecasts. There is only one forecast of the amplitude of Solar Cycle 25 to date. That forecast is Livingstone and Penn’s prediction of a maximum amplitude of seven. The first forecast, by Libby and Pandolfi, of the current quiet period is now over 40 years old. The fact that Libby and Pandolfi’s prediction got the detail of temperature changes to date right gives great credibility to it. Written in 1979, they forecast a warming trend for the rest of the 20th century followed by a cold snap that might well last throughout the first half of the 21st century. Specifically, Dr Libby is quoted by the Los Angeles Times as saying,

“we see a warming trend (by about a quarter of 1 degree Fahrenheit) globally to around the year 2000. And then it will get really cold – if we believe our projections. This has to be tested.” How cold? “Easily one or two degrees,” she replied, “and maybe even three or four degrees.”

The Libby and Pandolfi forecast was based on isotope ratios in tree rings and dates from a time before the corruption of tree ring science.

One commercial consequence of lower solar activity is that satellites will last longer in their orbits. Another is that agricultural production in the mid-latitudes will be affected. One of the most productive agricultural regions on the planet is the Corn Belt of the United States. Modern corn hybrids are tuned around maximizing the yield from the growing conditions experienced in the Corn Belt over the last 30 years with Growing Degree Days (GDD) to maturity ranging from 2200 to 2700. GDD is calculated from the day of planting by adding the maximum and minimum daily temperature in Fahrenheit, dividing by two and then subtracting 50 to produce the result. If the overnight minimum is less than 50°F, 50°F is used. The maximum is capped at 86°F as corn plants don’t grow any faster above that temperature. Daily temperature records for the Corn Belt start about 1900. The following graph shows the accumulation of GDDs for the periods 1901 – 1910 and 2001 – 2010 for Whitestown just northeast of Indianapolis in the southeast end of the Corn Belt:

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Figure 2: Cumulative GDD for Whitestown, Indiana 1901 – 1910 and 2001 – 2010

The graph assumes a common planting date of 27th April. The blue lines are the years 1901 – 1910 and the red lines are the years 2001 – 2010. They all stop on the date of first frost. Most of the growing seasons last decade had plenty of heat to get to maturity with up to 1,000 GDD in excess of the requirement at 2,500 GDD. A century before, the margin of safety was far less. Normal first frost for Whitestown is 10th October. A century ago the earliest frost was five weeks before that on 3rd September, 1908. Similarly, in the latter period the earliest date to get to 2,500 GDD was 15th August. In the earlier period the last date to get to 2,500 GDD was almost six weeks later at 28th September.

Farmers can adjust the type of crop they grow to suit their climatic expectations. Yield is directly proportional to GDD though as shown by the following graphic of corn and soybeans:

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Figure 3: Yield relative to GDD (CHU) for Corn and Soybeans Source: Andy Bootsma, 2002: Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Eastern Canada

If a farmer plants a 2,200 GDD corn crop in the expectation of a cool or short season and the season turns out to have been capable of growing a 2,500 GDD, then he has foregone about 12% of the value of the later maturing variety. If he plants a 2,500 GDD variety and the season falls short though, most of the value of the crop will be lost. Wheat and barley require about 1,600 GDD and 1,400 GDD respectively. The highest wheat yield in Indiana in 2012 was 74 bushels/acre whereas the highest corn yield was 159 bushels/acre. Another factor in predicting grain output is the ability to switch to winter wheat in which a crop is planted in early September, germinates and then lies dormant under the snow blanket until the following spring.

A study in the 1980s of the effect of lower temperatures on Canadian wheat production found that a 1°C decrease would reduce the frost-free period by 15 days and that a 2°C decrease would not allow the crop to ripen before the first frost. Canadian wheat farmers have assured me though that they could switch to winter wheat and have a higher yield. In Manitoba, for example, the yield might be 71 bushels per acre for winter wheat compared to 51 bushels per acre for spring wheat. Growing winter wheat is riskier than spring wheat in that a hard frost before the first snow could kill the crop.

A further complication in trying to determine what the coming decline in temperature will do to grain production is that the area of the Corn Belt approximates to the region that was scraped flat by the Laurentide ice sheet. After the Wisconsin Glacier receded, the glaciated soils of the Midwest that are primarily north of Interstate 70 were covered with several feet of wind-blown loess deposits that came from the Great Plains that lie east of the Rockies. In Northern Illinois for example, in an area north of I-80, six to eight feet of loess deposits overlie glacier till. These soils are all primarily silt loam, silty clay loam, clay loam and clay. The water holding capacity of these soils are about 2 inches per foot. The counties in the Corn Belt with the highest productivity have deep fertile soils. Most of these soils were covered with prairie grass that over time raised the organic matter levels to between 2% and 5%. The resulting biological activity that developed in these soils made them very productive. These counties are also watered by natural rainfall that results from the Gulf of Mexico Pump. As the weather fronts move from west to east across the Rockies, we have the Great Plains that are mostly arid, but by the time the fronts reach eastern Nebraska, the moisture from the Gulf of Mexico is sucked north by the counter-clockwise flow of air that rotates around the low pressure fronts and drops the rain on the Midwest when it hits the cooler air from the north. Therefore the Corn Belt has the optimum combination of soil type, temperature and moisture. As growing conditions shift south, the soil types won’t be as good.

Friis-Christianson and Lassen theory enables us to predict temperature for a solar cycle if we know the length of the solar cycle preceding it. Thus Solheim et al have been able to predict that the average global temperature over Solar Cycle 24 will be 0.9°C lower than it was over Solar Cycle 23. Polar amplification also plays a part such that Svalbard, for example, in winter will experience a 6°C decline in temperature. Work on temperature records in the northeast United States suggest that the temperature decline in prospect for the Corn Belt is 2.0°C for Solar Cycle 24.

We can cross-check this expectation against modelled historic Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) data. Lean et al produced a reconstruction of TSI back to 1610. That is shown in Figure 4 following. Also shown is Livingstone and Penn’s prediction for Solar Cycle 25 amplitude converted to TSI by scaling against the Maunder Minimum. Shaviv in 2008 found empirically that a 1 watt/m2 change in TSI was associated with (as opposed to cause directly) in a 0.6°C change in global average temperature. A fall in solar activity to levels reached in the Dalton Minimum, as per Lean’s data, would result in a decline of global temperature of 1.2°C, a little more than what Solheim’s group is projecting. Solar Cycle 4, the cycle preceding the Dalton Minimum, was 13.6 years long, about a year longer than Solar Cycle 23. Libby and Pandolfi’s prediction of a temperature decline of up to 4°F translates to 2.2°C. Through TSI, this would require a fall of 3.7 watts/m2 which is greater than the range in Lean’s modelled data for the period since 1610. This may mean that Libby and Pandolfi are correct and Lean’s model needs adjusting.

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Figure 4: Projecting the decline in Total Solar Irradiance

Working through the effect on GDDs, a return to TSI conditions of the Dalton Minimum can be expected to reduce US corn production by perhaps 20% to 25%. This equates to the increase in corn production over the last ten years from mandated ethanol. US grain and soybean production of about 500 million tonnes per annum is sufficient to feed 1.2 billion vegetarians. The amine profile of wheat can be approximated by a diet of 70% corn and 30% soybeans, otherwise those things are fed to animals at about a 25% protein conversion efficiency. Corn and soybeans would be the diet of involuntary vegetarianism. The rest of the world does not have the luxury of US agriculture’s latent productivity.

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Figure 5: US Corn and Wheat Prices 1784 to 2013

Figure 5 shows the effect of the low temperatures of the Dalton Minimum on corn and wheat prices in the United States. The absolute peak was associated with the eruption of Mt Tambora. Also evident is the period of high and volatile prices associated with the cold temperatures of the mid-19th century.

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Figure 6: Major wheat exporting countries

A return to the climatic conditions of the Dalton Minimum is likely to take Russia, Kazakhstan and the European Union out of the export market. The other countries will have some reduction in wheat available for export. Colder is also drier and thus a number of major grain producers such as India and China, currently largely self-sufficient, will experience shortfalls from their requirements.

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Figure 6: Imports and exports of grain by continent

Figure 6 above shows net exports of grain by continent with the Arab countries as a separate region. Those countries are the biggest grain importing block on the planet. Soybeans are not included in this graphic. China has become the major soybean importer at 60 million tonnes per annum. In terms of protein content, that equates to about 180 million tonnes of wheat per annum. The Chinese convert those soybeans to animal protein in the form of pig meat.

Countries in the Middle East North Africa (MENA) region have been in the news recently. Further detail on their import dependency is shown in Figure 6 following.

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Figure 6: MENA region domestic and imported grain by country

In Figure 6, the population size of each country is shown by the size of the bar. The blue component of the bar shows how much of each country’s grain requirement is grown domestically and the red component denotes the imported share. Countries are shown from west to east as per the map. A proportion of the Egyptian population already suffers from malnutrition. A current wheat prices, it costs about $1 per day to keep someone fed in terms of bulk grain. The oil exporting countries in the graphic can afford to feed their populations, with some countries feeding others as well. Saudi Arabia has been keeping Yemen above water and more recently took on Egypt too.

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Figure 7: An animal model of population growth and collapse

All the countries of the MENA region have seen their populations grow to well in excess of their inherent carrying capacity. A combination of deteriorating climate and ongoing world population growth can be reasonably expected to cause a spike in grain prices to levels last seen in the 19th century. It is also possible that sufficient grain may not be available at any price in some regions. Populations models from the animal kingdom provide some guidance as to how events might unfold. A good example is the snowshoe hare and lynx of North America. The snowshoe hare population collapses to less than 10% of its peak on a roughly ten year cycle, followed by the lynx. Taking the example of Egypt, the current population is twice the level that can be supported by its grain production. If the food supply to that country falls below the minimum required to maintain public order, then the distribution system for diesel and fertiliser will break down and domestic grain production would also be affected.

The starving populations of Egyptian cities will fan out into the countryside and consume whatever they can chew which will include the seed grain. That will ensure that domestic grain production will collapse. The population of Egypt might fall to 10% of its carrying capacity which would be 5% of its current level. Any starvation in the MENA region is likely to trigger panic buying by other governments in the region and beyond with consequent effects on established trade patterns.

UPDATE:

The Excel spreadsheet for the Whitestown data used in this essay is here Whitestown-all-years (.xlsx file)

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James Strom
September 8, 2013 8:24 pm

I’m curious about faster maturing crops. If the quantity of harvest is the same, why wouldn’t farmers use the shorter season crops every year? Perhaps they could get two crops in, or just get an extra week at Punta Gorda. You have to suspect that the slower growing crops take in those extra degree-days to produce a greater tonnage of food. So a shorter season does imply less production despite the faster growing crops.

GlynnMhor
September 8, 2013 8:42 pm

Day suggests: “But there was no cooling in 1902-1913, was there?”
Well, 1910 is about the time of the minimum before the ~~1910-1940 warming period.
It was a cool period compared to prior and afterward.
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/temperature/HadCRUT4.pdf

Pilobollus
September 8, 2013 8:52 pm

For those wanting to go all Chicken Little on this thread, I’d highly recommend reading the Chief’s thoughts on the topic first. Perhaps Anthony would publish it.
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2013/01/11/grains-and-why-food-will-stay-plentiful/

TomRude
September 8, 2013 9:07 pm

In Canada, the Globe and Mail rehashes the Munich Re report about droughts… typical alarmist crap…

wayne
September 8, 2013 9:10 pm

Farmers are smarter than this article implies, today they are more a scientist than any “climatologist”, that’s for sure, you can bank on it. No worries, the world is “greening” due to the increase in co2 as we speak and you can thank mankind’s using fossil fuels every meal for it.

September 8, 2013 9:37 pm

Kip Hansen said September 8, 2013 at 3:15 pm

Only plagues, before modern medicine, and communism have been successful at knocking back human populations to any great degree — so far.

And what caused those plagues? Is it a mere coincidence that they occurred during periods of climatic cooling and crop failures?

September 8, 2013 9:40 pm

For those questioning the relationship between temperature and precipitation, it’s interesting to note that in the Asian/Siberian hotspot that summer soil moisture as measured is higher than during the 60s & 70s. Of course the AOGCMs say the opposite, but c’est la vie.

September 8, 2013 10:06 pm

Willis Eschenbach said September 8, 2013 at 10:24 am

I’m gonna have to protest this one:

A return to the climatic conditions of the Dalton Minimum is likely to take Russia, Kazakhstan and the European Union out of the export market.
You repeat the error of the climate alarmists, who claim that a rise of a few degrees will be catastrophic. While a fall of a few degrees is definitely something to be concerned with, I don’t think that farmers are as foolish as you seem to assume they are. If the growing season gets shorter, they will switch to shorter season crops, including short-season corn.

I seem to recall that the USSR became a wheat importing region during the cooling of the 60s and 70s. Curiously, the same period that saw mass starvation in Bangladesh, sub-Saharan Africa and several other places.
You say farmers will switch to short season crops as if they had any say in such things these days. You sow what’s available in a market dominated by the likes of Monsanto who successfully sued Canadian farmer Percy Schmeisser for sowing home-saved seed. A century ago there were more than 200 varieties of savoy cabbage seed available in the catalogues. Twenty years ago, that was down to less than a dozen. Today less than 5. The genetic base of our food is rapidly growing smaller making the food production system vulnerable not just to a climate shift, but also new diseases. Think Irish potato famine: small genetic base, limited number of crop varieties (few grains for example) and a minor climate shift.

Gail Combs
September 8, 2013 10:53 pm

Dr. Bob says: September 8, 2013 at 2:09 pm
….. CE yields are based on multiple crops, but mixed prairie grasses and corn stover are the primary feedstocks for these yet to be build CE fuel processing plants. (Note that the massive land area needed to grow energy crops will be taken from pasture land making beef prices rise.)
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
“The nation that destroys its soil destroys itself.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1937
Pasture land is normally pasture land because it is marginal for growing crops (too hilly, too rocky, too wet.) Rotating from crops to pasture increase the amount of organic matter in the soil, that is it produces top soil. When you remove the grasses and corn stover (leaves and stalks of maize) and burn it as biofuel you are literally “burning your top soil’ by removing the manure/compost that would normally be returned to the soil.
E.M. Smith (ChiefIO) had an article that illustrates this problem at its most primitive.

Back in the ’70s or so I saw an article….
The basic thrust of the article was about a place in India where there was a lot of “Desertification” happening. They had photographs of a Dr. Rmamumblemumblemumble who had ‘fixed it’. What “stuck in my brain” were the method, and a strong visual of the location. They had “before” and “after” pictures of the same location with The Good Doctor seated in the same place. Just “night and day”…..
What changed? Simple, really.
Before, the goats ran free and ate all things that tried to grow. Nothing got very far…..
Several negative feedback loops were at work here. The System reversed them into positive feedback loops.
Burning dung means it is not available to fertilize the ground. Nitrogen compounds burned up, instead of turned to fertilizers. Smoky fires causing blindness and pneumonia (among other things). Goats mowing down any ambitious plant before it could grow to size, leaving the ground bare to overheat and dry out. No water from the ground to transpire into the air, so even less rain. All leading to less food, worse health, more intensive grazing of goats, and ever more desperation trying to find fuel wood…..
The Doctor started with the goats. Pen the goats.
Now plants could grow without destruction. This can then shade the dirt so rains soak in rather than evaporate. The wet cycle starts toward the positive.
Goat Poo is collected and, instead of burning it, fermented in an anaerobic digester (made of local materials – bricks in a hole in the ground, IIRC) and the resultant methane gas piped to the huts to a “stove”. The stove was made of dried mud. Little more than shaped mud where the methane from fermentation, “Gobar Gas”, was mixed with air in a very low pressure ‘jet’ and burned under a pot…
Now the “sludge” from the fermenter is GREAT fertilizer. It gets spread on a garden area. Any excess gets spread on the “field” (still a bit like a desert). From the garden, the family gets consistent food….
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2013/03/12/leucaena-leucocephala-collection-of-links/

This is a simple illustration of what the ‘Biofuel’ mania is doing in a much more sophisticated manner. Instead of farmers aiding Mother Nature in producing a more fertile soil, the soil is now ‘mined’ until no topsoil is left. ‘Biofuel’ is equivalent to burning the goat manure. With “Big Money’ moving into farming there is no incentive to keep the farm productive for the grandkids. Once a farm is no longer productive ‘Big Money’ will just move on to the next boom and bust.

The effects of corn monoculture on soils
To counter the effects of monoculture on soils, crop rotation should be employed by farmers. As an example of the worst soil depleting crop, one has to look no further than at corn crops. crops grown on the same soil year after year deplete the soil. The question is what happens to the soil when corn is grown year after year in soil without any thought of crop rotation? It is a well known fact among farmers that corn depletes the soil faster than any other crop. It demands more nutrients and for this reason it is a crop that is rotated or is planted on land that has been fallow for at least a year. During this time a crop of vetch or some legume crop is sown and is plowed under in the fall. This supplies the leeched nutrients from the heavy corn crop.
This has not been the practice with the ethanol craze…..
It is easy to see then that negligence of these important soil requirements will result in a depleted soil that will, in the long run, prove more disastrous to agriculture than helpful.
http://www.helium.com/items/1851842-corn-crops-rob-soil-of-nutrients

ALSO SEE: How to build new topsoil
There is a lot of information out there on loss of topsoil and how to prevent it/rebuild it. Burning it as ‘Biofuel’ is not one of them.

Gail Combs
September 8, 2013 11:27 pm

The Pompous Git says: September 8, 2013 at 10:06 pm
[Willis]You say farmers will switch to short season crops as if they had any say in such things these days. You sow what’s available in a market dominated by the likes of Monsanto who successfully sued Canadian farmer Percy Schmeisser for sowing home-saved seed. A century ago there were more than 200 varieties of savoy cabbage seed available in the catalogues. Twenty years ago, that was down to less than a dozen. Today less than 5. The genetic base of our food is rapidly growing smaller making the food production system vulnerable not just to a climate shift, but also new diseases…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You nailed it!
Here is the information to back up what you are saying.
FAO is supporting harmonization of seed rules and regulations in Africa and Central Asia in order to stimulate the development of a vibrant seed industry “…An effective seed regulation harmonization process involves dialogue amongst all relevant stakeholders from both private and public sectors. Seed quality assurance, variety release, plant variety protection, biosafety, plant quarantine and phytosanitary issues are among the major technical areas of a regional harmonized seed system. The key to a successful seed regulation harmonization is a strong political will of the governments involved….” http://www.fao.org/ag/portal/archive/detail/en/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=5730&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=1886&cHash=7f04326e35

As concerns such as avian flu, animal welfare and consumer preferences impact the poultry industry, the reduced genetic diversity of commercial bird breeds increases their vulnerability and the industry’s ability to adapt, according to a genetics expert.
Purdue University animal sciences professor Bill Muir was part of an international research team that analyzed the genetic lines of commercial chickens used to produce meat and eggs around the world. Researchers found that commercial birds are missing more than half of the genetic diversity native to the species….
He said it’s also important to preserve non-commercial breeds and wild birds for the purpose of safeguarding genetic diversity…..
https://news.uns.purdue.edu/x/2008b/081103Muirdiversity.html

However Big Ag is nor interested in preserve non-commercial breeds.

INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR ANIMAL RECORDING
PATENTING IN THE ANIMAL SECTOR
“…The Patenting Sentinel and Action Service (PSAS) is an important initiative of the International Committee for Animal Recording (ICAR) as regards patenting in the animal sector. This is an issue which is of uttermost importance for the future of all organizations involved in the sectors of animal recording and genetic evaluation. The latest developments in this field and the future prospects are causing increasing concern among industrialists and breeders, thus stressing the need for continuous updating on the progress of animal patenting issues worldwide and raising the awareness of professionals regarding their possibility to take action towards the protection of their professional interests.
 
Based on the above concerns, the Board of the International Committee for Animal Recording has considered ways to positively support ICAR member organizations and other interested entities in confronting the issue of patenting in animal breeding. The result of the deliberations is the ICAR Patenting Sentinel and Action Service, formed in March-April 2006.
http://www.icar.org/%5Cpages%5Cpsas.htm

Patenting in plants is much further ahead.
1961 PVP is the Plant Variety Protection: The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants: Gave seed companies a monopoly on only the commercial multiplication and the marketing of seeds. Farmers remained free to save seed from their own harvest to plant in the following year, and other breeders could freely use any variety, protected or not, to develop a new one. http://www.patentlens.net/daisy/KeyOrgs/1236/428.html
1980 the Supreme Court decision in Diamond v. Chakrabarthy, 447 U.S. 303 enabled living organisms to be patented. http://www.wisbar.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Wisconsin_Lawyer&template=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&contentid=49620
1991 PVP monopoly has applied to seed multiplication and also to the harvest and sometimes the final product as well. Previously unlimited right of farmers to save seed for the following year’s planting has been changed into an optional exception. Only if national government allows, can farm-saved seed still be used, and a royalty has to be paid to the seed company even for seeds grown on-farm. http://www.grain.org/seedling_files/smar2002.pdf
1995 World Trade Organization (WTO) formed. Former Cargill Vice-President, Dan Amstutz, drafts the original text of the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture.
July 26, 2002: Report Finds Fundamental Flaws in WTO’s Agreement on Agriculture: Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy report argues that the Agreement on Agriculture fails to account for agri-business’ monopoly over global agricultural trade. http://www.socialfunds.com/news/article.cgi/891.html
May, 2003, the European Patent Office in Munich granted a patent to Monsanto with the number EP 445929, with the simple title “plants”, even though plants are not patentable in European Law. http://www.countercurrents.org/en-shiva270404.htm
June 2006 Global Diversity Treaty: Standard Material Transfer Agreement (SMTA) a standardized contract that will enable much easier access to crop diversity. [ germplasm for patenting] royalty payment (1.1% of sales) is paid only if product is unavailable for further breeding and research. funds will be devoted to conservation efforts. Translation: Bio-techs Corporations steal seed from third world farmers, patents it and pay money to Bioversity International http://www.bioversityinternational.org/publications/pdf/1144.pdf
December 2006 “In the EU, there is now a list of ‘official’ vegetable varieties. Seed that is not on the list cannot be ‘sold’ to the ‘public’ To keep something on the list costs thousands of pounds each year…Hundreds of thousands of old heirloom varieties (the results of about eleven thousand years of plant breeding by our ancestors) are being lost forever . http://www.defra.gov.uk/planth/pvs/pbr/app-procedure.htm & http://www.realseeds.co.uk/terms.html & http://www.euroseeds.org/pdf/ESA_03.0050.1.pdf
Feb 2007 GRAIN press release USA: Seed companies want to ban farm-saved seeds
A new report from GRAIN reveals the new lobbying offensive from the global seed industry to make it a crime for farmers to save seeds for the next year’s planting. See History at http://www.gmfreeireland.org/news/2007/feb.php
Feb 2007 Clones declared save: FDA decides based on “risk assessment” that meat and milk from adult clones and their offspring are as safe to consume as those from standard animals. http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2007/02/354270.shtml
April 2007 Monsanto, Cargill and Maseca-ADM sign agreements to establish regional seed banks in the center and south of Mexico. http://www.counterpunch.org/ross11212007.html
September 2007 Arctic Seed Vault http://www.physorg.com/news90236313.html
January 8 2008 ~In the UK Defra has dropped the word ‘farming’ from its title. “Defra and the Treasury’s joint vision document of 2006 presented to the EU argued that supports for farming should be completely abandoned..” http://www.warmwell.com/archivejan2008.html
May 2008 Bio-tech companies lobby to lift ban against terminator gene http://www.gmfreeireland.org/news/2008/may.php

September 8, 2013 11:29 pm

The “Cognitive Dissonance” demonstration over learning, “It’s the Sun Stupid”, is fascinating.

September 8, 2013 11:39 pm

Bill_W says:
September 8, 2013 at 12:49 pm
This is not peak food. This is the effect of temp. on food production, which can have serious effect depending on how cold it gets.
—————————————————–
Especially being that the world now holds over 7 billion people.

Gail Combs
September 9, 2013 12:11 am

We are currently at a 15 to 20 year ‘Pause’ in temperatures if the data sets are to be believed.
The temperature can either continue not to change get warmer or get cooler. Without looking at any other data it is a 50/50 chance of it becoming warmer or cooler.
However:
# 1. The Arctic and Antarctic sea ice are both growing this year.
# 2. Long term the Greenland snow accumulation is increasing Graph Alley GISP2 – 2000
# 3. The Northern hemisphere fall (oct.) snow is increasing: graph
# 4. A significant percentage of the glaciers in the Himalayas are expanding.
# 5. Norway is Experiencing Greatest Glacial Activity in the past 1,000 year… most glaciers likely didn’t exist 6,000 years ago, but the highest period of the glacial activity has been in the past 600 years.
# 6. The jet stream has gone from zonal to a meridional pattern.
# 7. NASA: Quiet Sun Means Cooling of Earth’s Upper Atmosphere
# 8. NASA: Quiet Interlude in Solar Max: Something unexpected is happening on the Sun. 2013 was supposed to be the year of “solar maximum,” the peak of the 11-year sunspot cycle. Yet 2013 has arrived and solar activity is relatively low. Sunspot numbers are well below their values from 2011, and strong solar flares have been infrequent.
Given the above, I think the odds favor cooling rather than warming in the next decades. We are after all trending down in energy from the Holocene Optimum. graph: summer solar energy of the Northern Hemisphere from link

September 9, 2013 12:42 am

Gail Combs said September 8, 2013 at 11:27 pm

You nailed it!

Hmmmm… maybe it’s time I rewrote this and brought it into the 21stC:
http://www.sturmsoft.com/Writing/FarmFert/farmfert01.htm
and published it as an eBook.

September 9, 2013 1:10 am

Willis Eschenbach says:
September 8, 2013 at 3:48 pm
Gary Pearse says:
September 8, 2013 at 3:06 pm
Cold weather strains have long-ago been made into bread or diesel and we are overly stocked with hot seeds.
“And just what do you imagine that they are planting in Canada, Gary … hot weather strains?”
Well we will then need colder weather strains won’t we and Canada isn’t going to be able to supply the word with the seed they will need. I want to be careful getting deeper into this as I, too, don’t believe we will throw in the towel – probably TX, AZ, NM and Mex will be then able to plant IA, IN, WI, etc grains – Canada will raise sheep – assuming the cooling won’t be too steep and quick.

Ian W
September 9, 2013 1:49 am

Tim Ball says:
September 8, 2013 at 7:32 pm

All the emphasis on GDD forgets as Tim Ball says the other factors. So let’s say that in the ‘corn belt’ after the late spring frost there is no or very little rain until late July when there are heavy flooding rains for the next 6 to 8 weeks when the first snows and frosts arrive in September on flooded muddy fields that then freeze. If you cannot plant then it really doesn’t matter what the GDD requirement is – if your harvest is flooded for a few weeks again you have lost. It does seem that people expect the changes to be just in ‘temperature’ – yet the meridonal jets have already shown that is not the case. At the start of the Little Ice Age there was ‘The Great Famine’ caused by locked in weather patterns causing continual rains in Europe, and no doubt droughts elsewhere.
It is nice easy maths to use something like GDD but that is based on ‘all else being equal’ – and it won’t be.

David Archibald
September 9, 2013 1:54 am

John Day says:
September 8, 2013 at 8:19 pm
When I sat down to write this piece, I deliberately chose to use the word consensus because the warmers had used it to shut down discussion. Irony is the term. One of life’s little pleasures is tormenting lefties, particularly the idiotic warmer lefties. Six years ago I was a lone voice saying that cooling is coming. Now it is the mainstream view.
Now you mention Dr Svalgaard, in fact you may be Dr Svalgaard. Dr Svalgaard has stated something, but it is not that the Sun affects the Earth’s climate. What does the Bible say? The Bible says “There are none so blind as those who will not see.” By regurgitating the purported views of Dr Svalgaard, you have made yourself a discredited element, to quote Marxist lexicology.
There are two clues that you are in fact Dr Svalgaard. One is this part sentence,”so who cares what Schatten predicted in 2003?” Someone who is not a solar physicist would not refer to the eminent Dr Schatten with such contempt. Dr Schatten does careful, detailed and thoughtful work. See these papers from 2012 and 2013:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186%2F2193-1801-2-21
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/aa/2012/923578/citations/
At age 69, he continues to stump up to work each day in Maryland to help keep our satellites in orbit. How jealous you must be of someone who is held in such high esteem by the solar physics community.
The other hint is your use of the phrase,”this historical correlation of cooling and low solar magnetic activity”. I didn’t mention solar magnetic activity. In fact the piece used TSI solely. Only a solar physicist would have thrown that in out of the blue. By using the term “solar magnetic activity”, you have alerted us to the fact that you think that solar magnetic activity is the main driver of climate. And you know what, you are probably right. Lastly, the smiley face at the end is pure Svalgaard. The psychiatrists have a term for it – multiple personality disorder. I advise you to not seek treatment – it is very entertaining for the rest of us.

September 9, 2013 5:03 am

David Archibald says:
“If a farmer plants a 2,200 GDD corn crop in the expectation of a cool or short season and the season turns out to have been capable of growing a 2,500 GDD, then he has foregone about 12% of the value of the later maturing variety. If he plants a 2,500 GDD variety and the season falls short though, most of the value of the crop will be lost.”
I know how to produce deterministic weekly-monthly forecasts as far ahead as anyone would need, so much could be planned around. The first very problematic growing season will in 2016, with a very cold April-May-June, conditions will be as least as bad as those that triggered the Agra famine in India.

September 9, 2013 5:42 am

@Archibald
> The psychiatrists have a term for it – multiple personality disorder.
> I advise you to not seek treatment
Actually, you are the one who are exhibiting symptoms of delusional disorder here, believing that I am Leif Svalgaard. (!)
> By regurgitating the purported views of Dr Svalgaard,…
Yet another delusion. I didn’t quote any of Svalgaard’s ‘views’, only that he pointed out that you are incorrectly citing “SIDC data”. What is your response to that ‘purported’ charge?
> I didn’t mention solar magnetic activity…
You mentioned “solar activity”. This term, when used by solar scientists, is a rather specialized term and is not a synonym for “solar output”. It is shorthand for “solar magnetic activity cycle” and refers to cyclic activity associated with sunspots, which are best described as “magnetic storms on the Sun”. So the current “low solar activity” (the theme of your article, right?) is actually a manifestation of the Sun’s magnetic activity. Solar activity has little to do with solar output (TSI), which varies only 0.1% during these solar magnetic activity cycles.
>… refer to the eminent Dr Schatten with such contempt.
I meant no disrespect to Kenneth Schatten, whom I hold in high regard. My point was that you didn’t need to quote Schatten to ‘prove’ that current solar activity is very low. I think you used that reference to support your claims about global cooling, which is a distortion of what Schatten meant by “Solar Activity Heading for a Maunder Minimum”.
You don’t seem to be able (or willing) to separate your “science” from politics and theology. (I can’t tell what Leif’s political and religious beliefs are. They are not written on his sleeve.) So I regard you as a polemicist, not a scientist in the same league as Leif Svalgaard.
😐

Editor
September 9, 2013 5:57 am

Reply to David Archibald (September 8, 2013 at 4:05 pm)
“Kip Hansen says: September 8, 2013 at 3:15 pm Involuntary vegetarianism will keep the circus going for a bit longer. Animal protein will get a lot more expensive….”
The repeated assertion of your own predictions or those of others will not make your case, any more than it did for Paul Ehrlich or the Club of Rome.
You must be able to answer the points raised by critics on a reasonable and logical basis.
The point I raised in criticism of your last few paragraphs is that human populations have not historically followed the predator/prey population dynamic model which you depend on to wrap up your presentation.

Editor
September 9, 2013 6:03 am

Reply to The Pompous Git (September 8, 2013 at 9:37 pm)
Kip Hansen said September 8, 2013 at 3:15 pm ” Only plagues, …..~snip~”
“And what caused those plagues? Is it a mere coincidence that they occurred during periods of climatic cooling and crop failures?”
I believe that the most devastating plagues on human population were probably those in the Americas after the arrival of Europeans — totally unrelated to climate factors. Climate does not cause plagues. Climate factors can exacerbate plagues and vice versa.

Tom in Florida
September 9, 2013 6:37 am

Perhaps one should take this information and indulge in the grain markets at a commodities exchange. You could make millions.

David Archibald
September 9, 2013 7:02 am

Kip Hansen says:
September 9, 2013 at 5:57 am
I will tell you how it works. I do work and Anthony is kind enough to publish it on this blog. What is written is my best understanding based on everything. If you don’t like the result, that is your perogative. The alternative is for you to do some work. If there are 84 million Egyptians and there is only enough food for 40 million, how is that going to pan out?

milodonharlani
September 9, 2013 7:42 am

Kip Hansen says:
September 9, 2013 at 6:03 am
In terms of number of people killed per year, IMO the 1918 Influenza Pandemic probably ranks as top pestilence. But longer-lasting plagues have killed more in total. The influenza however killed more in one year than the Black Death in all the years of its first appearance in Western Europe.
The epidemics & endemic infestations of smallpox, yellow fever, measles, TB & other Old World diseases (to include zoonotics from swine) did indeed wreak havoc in the New World after 1492, killing millions if not tens of millions in the following centuries. However I wouldn’t totally exonerate the deteriorating climate of the 15th to 19th centuries. In North America, the Mound Building Culture had already collapsed after 1400, with population decline from climate change. American populations were already suffering when hit with the new plagues. While the European oceanic Drang nach Westen (& Süden) was largely driven by the Turks’ closing off valuable commercial routes to the East, climate change also contributed to the Atlantic seafaring adventures of Spain, Portugal & other Christian powers.

September 9, 2013 7:48 am

David Archibald , you have been correct and I have been in complete agreement with your thoughts. I am going to resend to you my take on the solar climate relationship in my next post. Thanks.