Global climate change exacerbates inequality in food security

Published 2021년 8월 20일

Tridge summary

July 2021 is projected to be the hottest month on record due to increasing extreme weather events and natural disasters caused by climate change. These conditions are adversely affecting global food security, particularly in countries dependent on agricultural production. Notably, the United States, Canada, and Russia, major wheat producers, have experienced significant drops in output due to extreme weather. The United Nations has warned of a surge in global hunger due to conflict, climate change, and economic recession, with the number of people facing food shortages expected to rise dramatically. This crisis is expected to worsen due to rising food prices, with the inequality in food security likely to increase further. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations is calling for collaboration between governments and businesses to address these systemic risks and work towards ensuring food security.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The National Environmental Information Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of the United States recently announced that July 2021 will become the hottest month since the world has weather observation records. Accompanied by record-breaking high temperatures are frequent extreme weather phenomena and natural disasters in many parts of the world: continuous heat waves in North America, heavy rains in many European countries, rare low temperatures in Brazil, and forest fires in many countries in the northern hemisphere... Under the influence of climate change and extreme weather, global food security issues have become increasingly prominent in recent years; however, for countries and populations of different economic conditions, the actual impacts caused by them are not the same-the new "inequality" , Is being staged quietly. one Since the beginning of summer this year, Russia, the United States and Canada, the main wheat producing countries in the world, ...
Source: Chinaeconomy

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