Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events

Agroclimatic extremes can be seen as typical supply shifters that, on a par with economic and structural drivers, distort supply, demand, trade, and induce price variability. Economic simulation models typically operate under the assumption of ‘normal’ growing conditions, contain no explicit paramet...

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Main Authors: Thomas Chatzopoulos, Ignacio Pérez Domínguez, Matteo Zampieri, Andrea Toreti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Weather and Climate Extremes
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471830121X
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spelling doaj-1b99facd5b87468a8d3fe17fc46ab80e2020-11-25T02:22:55ZengElsevierWeather and Climate Extremes2212-09472020-03-0127Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated eventsThomas Chatzopoulos0Ignacio Pérez Domínguez1Matteo Zampieri2Andrea Toreti3European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Inca Garcilaso 3, 41092, Seville, Spain; Corresponding author.European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Inca Garcilaso 3, 41092, Seville, SpainEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Via Enrico Fermi 2749, I, 21027, Ispra, ItalyEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Via Enrico Fermi 2749, I, 21027, Ispra, ItalyAgroclimatic extremes can be seen as typical supply shifters that, on a par with economic and structural drivers, distort supply, demand, trade, and induce price variability. Economic simulation models typically operate under the assumption of ‘normal’ growing conditions, contain no explicit parameterization of climatic anomalies on the supply side, and confound multifarious sources of yield fluctuation in harvest-failure scenarios. In this article we follow a novel approach by augmenting a partial equilibrium model of global agriculture with a recently developed indicator of yield stress. We perform a multi-scenario analysis where the most extreme temperature and soil-moisture anomalies of the last decades, be it negative or positive, recur in the near future. Our results indicate that: (i) regional climate extremes may have significant economic impacts both at the domestic and international levels; (ii) the magnitude of the transmission effect depends on the attributes of the simulated extremes, the positioning of the impacted country in the trade arena, and the market status quo at the time of the shock; and (iii) crop prices generally display asymmetry to the direction of the agrometeorological shock with stronger responsiveness to negative anomalies (i.e., those leading to yield reduction) than to positive ones. Keywords: Climate extremes, Weather extremes, Agricultural commodity markets, Simulation, JEL classification: Q11, Q17, Q18, Q54, Q56http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471830121X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Chatzopoulos
Ignacio Pérez Domínguez
Matteo Zampieri
Andrea Toreti
spellingShingle Thomas Chatzopoulos
Ignacio Pérez Domínguez
Matteo Zampieri
Andrea Toreti
Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
Weather and Climate Extremes
author_facet Thomas Chatzopoulos
Ignacio Pérez Domínguez
Matteo Zampieri
Andrea Toreti
author_sort Thomas Chatzopoulos
title Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
title_short Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
title_full Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
title_fullStr Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
title_full_unstemmed Climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: A global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
title_sort climate extremes and agricultural commodity markets: a global economic analysis of regionally simulated events
publisher Elsevier
series Weather and Climate Extremes
issn 2212-0947
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Agroclimatic extremes can be seen as typical supply shifters that, on a par with economic and structural drivers, distort supply, demand, trade, and induce price variability. Economic simulation models typically operate under the assumption of ‘normal’ growing conditions, contain no explicit parameterization of climatic anomalies on the supply side, and confound multifarious sources of yield fluctuation in harvest-failure scenarios. In this article we follow a novel approach by augmenting a partial equilibrium model of global agriculture with a recently developed indicator of yield stress. We perform a multi-scenario analysis where the most extreme temperature and soil-moisture anomalies of the last decades, be it negative or positive, recur in the near future. Our results indicate that: (i) regional climate extremes may have significant economic impacts both at the domestic and international levels; (ii) the magnitude of the transmission effect depends on the attributes of the simulated extremes, the positioning of the impacted country in the trade arena, and the market status quo at the time of the shock; and (iii) crop prices generally display asymmetry to the direction of the agrometeorological shock with stronger responsiveness to negative anomalies (i.e., those leading to yield reduction) than to positive ones. Keywords: Climate extremes, Weather extremes, Agricultural commodity markets, Simulation, JEL classification: Q11, Q17, Q18, Q54, Q56
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471830121X
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AT matteozampieri climateextremesandagriculturalcommoditymarketsaglobaleconomicanalysisofregionallysimulatedevents
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