This is incorrect. Corn is grown all the way from Mexico to Canada, it's not going to be affected by heat. Wheat will, but it will be replaced with corn. There will be more land for growing wheat based on the increased growing season in Canada, it just requires soil improvement.
You say you have lived in an argicultural area, then you knoe that rainfall is crucial to the development of both maize and soy beans. The fact that maize and soybeans are grown in a large area does not mean that they are immune to heat stress and a lack of rainfall, the issue is that right now the average rainfall is about at the limit of the current heat stress for maize in central Illinois. If the average rainfall decreases, as many models say it will then this means that the maize crop will be devastated.
This applies to many of the temperate growing areas where maize and sot beans are currently grown.
I keep addressing multiple issues and you keep picking out a single one.
It is the average temperature and average rain fall that matter. If you have a July with temps of ~95 F and lower rainfall, that will definely stress the maize, especially if it is followed by a similar August.
I think you're forgetting that crops will change, and different varieties will be planted. Winter wheat in many places is planted not for the crop, but to keep the soil from drifting. I think it holds moisture or helps fertilize as well.
I think you are just waving your hand and saying "They will take care of it.", seriously if the temperatures stay the same here in Illinois as they are now and the rainfall shifts by an inch downwards each months or comes in one large splash each month, the yeilds will be trashed.
I don't think you listen to commodity reports, there is a market for hard red winter wheat. And maize will not grow where they usually plant it as a crop for harvest, even with a three week extension of the growing season.
This is just alarmist programming telling you this and not logic. Crops are grown in vastly different climates, more different than Global Warming presents. It's just requires change. Slow change, over 50 years or so.
This is a false accusation, I stated that some models show a decrease in the average summer rain fall, that would be a real problem, there is not enough ground water here to irrigate already.
So you do know that the higher the temperature the more rainfall you need for maize?
Geez man, they grow stuff in Arizona now because they have irrigation. They will most certainly be able to do so, even without GMO's in the midwest in the future. It's not the climate that's the problem, it's resistance to change.
Excuse me, there is not that much readily available ground water here, you are just making stuff up, the cost to pump it from a local source is adequate to compensate, well guess what there are many places in Illinois that do not have that sort of ground water, so if you ship it from the great lakes, that increases the cost.
Which gets back to what I said earlier, the marginal cost to capture and sequester carbon is much lower than the cost to compensate for climate change.
Wait, that's the price of land, did you mean the cost of greenhouses? Greenhouses are about $1M for every 5 acres, but that's state of the art and real Dutch glass. Yields are different due to the number of picks. If you want a fair cost I'd have to crunch some more numbers.
So again, the point is that the cost to sequester is always going to be cheaper than the cost to compensate, you can modify existing plants.
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Capture technology right now triples to quadruples the cost to build and raises the cost of electricity by about x2.8 if memory serves. It won't be long before that's mandated. (I'd have to find the DOE docs again to verify this before you quote me on it)
This is just something they need to get over.
Have to get over.[/QUOTE]
So I have stated that the impacts of climate change are multivariate, you keep focusing on single issues.
I keep saying ‘it is factors like temperature and rainfall and many models predicts a decrease in rainfall’, and then you go.
‘Well it can’t just be temperature.’