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22 January 2015

How can import-dependent countries reduce vulnerabiity to food price shocks under the changing climate?

Many countries are highly dependent on food imports. It is important to recognize this as a form of climate vulnerability, as climate change impacts in producing countries are likely to exacerbate global food price shocks.

Risk diversification can help countries reduce their food systems’ vulnerability to climate change. Relevant strategies include balancing food imports – particularly of staples such as cereals – with domestic production, and maintaining a diverse array of domestically grown crops to provide alternative food sources in the event of a staple crop failure.

Adaptation strategies that make sense for individual countries, such as restricting exports during food crises, may exacerbate risks at the global level. It is thus essential to increase research and policy dialogue on how trade policies can help build climate resilience, with an emphasis on food security in vulnerable, import-dependent countries.

Recent discussion brief published by Stockholm Environment Institute examines the nature of this risk and offers ideas for how import-dependent countries might begin to address it.

The brief is available in open access at the SEI’s website.

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Book launch: Creating Sustainable Bioeconomies
30 November 2016
Stockholm, Sweden