2022 UK heatwave impacts on agrifood: implications for a climate-resilient food system

Jemma C.S. Davie*, Pete D. Falloon, Daniel L.A. Pain, Tierney J. Sharp, Maddie Housden, Thomas C. Warne, Tom Loosley, Erin Grant, Jess Swan, James D.G. Spincer, Tom Crocker, Andrew Cottrell, Edward C.D. Pope, Simon Griffiths

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Record-breaking high temperatures were experienced across the United Kingdom during summer 2022. The impacts of these extreme climatic conditions were felt across the food system, including increased energy costs for cold storage, the failure of refrigeration systems in numerous retail facilities, and impacts on livestock including heat stress. Future climate projections indicate an increased likelihood and duration of extreme high temperatures like those experienced in 2022. Learning from the impacts of the 2022 heatwave on the United Kingdom food system can help identify adaptations that build resilience to climate change. We explore the impacts through two case studies (United Kingdom poultry and wheat sectors), discuss potential adaptation options required for a climate-resilient, net-zero United Kingdom food system and consider future research needs. United Kingdom chicken meat production was 9% lower in July 2022 than July 2021; in contrast, energy costs increased for both production and refrigeration. Potential heatwave adaptation measures for poultry include transitioning to heat tolerant chicken breeds, lower stocking density, dehumidification cooling and misting systems, nutritional supplements, and improving retail refrigeration resilience and efficiency. United Kingdom wheat yields were 8% higher in 2022 than the 2017–2021 average. Increases were observed in every United Kingdom region but were least in the South and East where the heatwave intensity was strongest. Future adaptation measures to avoid negative impacts of summer heat stress on winter wheat could include earlier maturing and heat/drought tolerant varieties, earlier autumn sowing, targeted irrigation for drought around anthesis, and soil and water conservation measures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1282284
JournalFrontiers in Environmental Science
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Davie, Falloon, Pain, Sharp, Housden, Warne, Loosley, Grant, Swan, Spincer, Crocker, Cottrell, Pope and Griffiths.

Research Groups and Themes

  • Food Justice Network

Keywords

  • adaptation
  • agriculture
  • climate change
  • food
  • heatwave
  • poultry
  • resilience
  • wheat

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