Climatologist Hristo Popov has highlighted the impact of heat waves on cereal cultivation, with wheat potentially burning and corn grains cracking due to high temperatures and prolonged drought. However, he emphasizes that there is no risk of crop extinction, but rather a shift in cultivation conditions towards more northern areas due to climate change. This shift is evident in the cultivation of kiwi in Southwestern Bulgaria and the growth of tropical fruits and heat-loving vine varieties in Western Europe. In Russia and Canada, agricultural land is moving northward. Rising temperatures are also extending the growing season in regions like South China, allowing for two crops in a year.