Climate Change, Extreme Weather Events, Food Security, and Nutrition: Evolving Relationships and Critical Challenges
Jessica Fanzo, Bianca Carducci, Jochebed Louis-Jean, Mario Herrero, Kevin Karl, Cynthia Rosenzweig
Abstract
Climate change, also known as global warming, poses significant challenges to the planet and humanity. With further warming, every region across the world is projected to increasingly experience concurrent and multiple changes in climate, compounding overall risk. Long-term climate change and near-term extreme weather events have multiple negative effects on food security, diets, and nutrition via complex, multidirectional pathways through food, health, water, and social protection systems. However, measuring climate-attributable malnutrition impacts, especially among the most vulnerable populations, remains challenging. Changes in climate across a range of geographies have been modeled, projected, and observed showing detrimental associations with dietary and nutrition outcomes, particularly undernutrition. Many undernourished populations are climate vulnerable due to a variety of determinants challenging their ability to adapt to impending risks. While nutrition integration within climate adaptation plans has lagged, there is momentum for robust collaboration between climate and nutrition communities to fill data gaps that are critical for joint decision-making.