UNITED NATIONS
Over the next 50 years, harvests of staple crops like rice, maize and wheat may be reduced by one- third due to global warming. This has been revealed by a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report published recently.
The document brings to the fore the fact that rising temperature adversely affects the ability of crops to flower and produce seed. It sounds a warning that the crops yields may decline by 10 per cent for every degree centigrade increase in temperature. In Uganda, the area for growing robusta coffee would be reduced with only the high mountains cool enough for the crop. As a result of the rising mercury, the Kenyan tea belt would move upwards and pose a risk for the sensitive forests and wildlife, including water supplies.
This UNEP report is based on work by the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines. And the key man, John Sheehy, who led the research team making this report, says, "One possible research solution is to find genes which will make flowering occur during the cool of the early morning.'
Related Content
- Joint committee report on pollution of Chandlai lake, Jaipur, Rajasthan, 21/11/2024
- Judgment of the National Green Tribunal regarding pollution by Nectar Life Sciences Limited, Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, Punjab, 21/11/2024
- Status report on behalf of Amicus Curiae on pollution by pulp and paper industry in Muzaffar Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, 20/11/2024
- Judgment of the Supreme Court regarding decision to construct a commercial airport in Silchar, Assam, 06/05/2024
- Order of the National Green Tribunal regarding fire breaking out at NTPC's superthermal power plant in Jharkhand, 01/05/2024
- Inspection Report by GPCB regarding Nadiad Nagarpalika SWM site, village Kamla, Manjipura road, Nadiad, Kheda, Gujarat, 26/04/2024