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Primer: Physical Factors of Agricultural Production & Climate Change

Gunda, Thushara; Valdez, Raquel L.; Brown, Meredith G.L.; Price, Stephen

This white paper is a primer on physical factors that influence agricultural production and associated touchpoints to climate change. Agricultural production (which includes both crop and livestock production) is critical for food security and supports other economic products, such as textiles and generation of fuels for energy. Various physical factors influence agricultural production, including the crop types being cultivated and livestock being raised; land area and quality; water access and control; fertilizers, pesticides, and antibiotics; labor; and infrastructure associated with processing, storage, and transportation. These factors are impacted by climate change in both chronic and acute ways, from changing temperatures and precipitation patterns to increased prevalence of extreme events and diseases. We draw on examples from around the world to show the complex ways that agricultural production factors and climate interact with local capacities to influence regions around the world.

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CLimate Impact: Determining Etiology thRough pAthways (CLDERA)

Bull, Diana L.; Peterson, Kara J.; Shand, Lyndsay; Swiler, Laura P.; Tezaur, Irina K.; Cook, Benjamin K.; Salinger, Andrew G.; Amann, Clare M.; Watts, Bernadette M.; Leland, Robert W.; Bertagna, Luca; Brown, Hunter; Brown, Meredith G.L.; Campos, Mauricio; Carlson, Max L.; Chowdhary, Kenny; Crockett, Joseph L.; Davis, Warren L.; Ehrmann, Thomas; Garrett, Robert C.; Goode, Katherine J.; Gulian, Mamikon; Hall, Carole R.; Harper, Graham B.; Hart, Joseph L.; Hickey, James J.; Hillman, Benjamin R.; Houchens, Brent C.; Huerta, Jose G.; Krofcheck, Daniel J.; Li, Justin D.; Manickam, Indu; Mcclernon, Kellie L.; Mccombs, Audrey; Nichol, J.J.; Peterson, Matthew G.; Ries, Daniel C.; Smith, Mark A.; Staid, Andrea; Steyer, Andrew; Tucker, J.D.; Wagman, Benjamin M.; Watkins, Jerry E.; Wentland, Christopher R.; Wenzel, Everett A.; Weylandt, Robert M.; Yarger, Andrew N.; Jablonowski, Christiane; Hollowed, Joseph P.; Liu, Xiaohong; Hu, Allen; Li, Bo; Shi-Jun, Samantha; Tsigaridis, Kostas; Singh, Ram; Marvel, Kate

Climate impacts have broad economic, health, political, and national security ramifications. Societally relevant impacts are typically farther downstream, are the product of multiple interacting processes, and can arise over small regions and timeframes because their sources are short-term and localized. Short-term forcings (as can be seen in volcanic eruptions, climatic tipping points (e.g., the collapse of rainforests or the disappearance of sea ice), or in increasingly plausible climate interventions) fundamentally possess low signal-to-noise and could benefit from accounting for the multiple conditional processes through which a downstream impact arises. Under the Grand Challenge LDRD CLDERA (CLimate impacts: Discovering Etiology thRough pAthways), we have developed tools to enable downstream impact attribution from geographically and temporally localized source forcings in the climate. CLDERA developed methods that can distinguish how a localized source drives the climate system to respond with particular impacts. The how is embodied in pathways – the spatio-temporally evolving chain of physical processes that connects a source to a series of increasingly distant impacts. Novel analytic methods in pursuit of downstream impact attribution were developed and demonstrated on simulations and observations of the 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines. As described within this report we have • developed stratospheric expertise and aerosol modeling capabilities in E3SM, • created original methods to detect and model pathways from source-to-impact, and • advanced climate attribution through novel methods, cases, and approaches. Further, CLDERA developed a tiered verification process consisting of controlled datasets to prototype, verify, and refine the original method development. CLDERA increased Sandia’s footprint in the climate analytics community and developed new climate collaborations whilst also creating a cadre of climate analysts at Sandia. The products from CLDERA have been extensive with a total of 9 journal articles published, 12 articles submitted and under review, and an additional 8 articles in preparation. We have produced 1750 simulated years and developed 9 code-bases. This report details these accomplishments and serves as a summary of the work completed during the CLDERA Grand Challenge.

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