Nathan Hendricks (Kansas State University)
Location: 368A Heady Hall
Description: Nathan Hendricks
"The Economic Benefits from Innovations to Reduce Heat and Water Stress in Agriculture"
Abstract: A key challenge in determining the optimal research and development (R&D) investment portfolio for adapting to climate change in agriculture is to understand the benefits from reducing alternative sources of climate damages. Growing evidence demonstrates a robust negative effect of extreme heat by regressing land values or crop yield on nonlinear functions of temperature and precipitation, but these studies are not able to separately identify the impacts of heat and water stress because higher temperatures cause damages through both mechanisms. To resolve the identification problem, I introduce measures of water deficit and water surplus from a water balance model into a regression analysis that estimates the nonlinear impacts of heat and water stress on nonirrigated rental rates in the central United States. The results indicate rental rate losses of 38% ($10.8 billion annually) by mid-century due to climate change in scenario RCP 4.5. I find that 65.0% of the projected damages are due to heat stress, 32.8% due to increasing water deficit, and 3.2% due to increasing water surplus. Large potential damages provide a strong rationale for significant R&D effort to adapt to climate change with a greater overall priority on reducing heat stress. However, the optimal R&D portfolio varies spatially since the source of damages varies spatially.
Contact Person: Wendong Zhang