If it's not feasible to grow right now then they can't continue to farm. There are more than enough farms in Canada in the US that can't make a living because the prices are so low.
I doubt that. There are farms which can't compete because their costs are high and production is low relative to the market average. Climate change will bring changes to all three factors - price, costs, and production. Variously, by region, in a global market. The final upshot is not as trivial a question as you're assuming.
And there's more than enough capacity. This protectionism you're supporting hurts more people than it helps.
Protection will push prices up - that's what it's for. Taking that factor in isolation, more farms will be able to compete, and more capacity will be utilised.
What it took the glacier 1000 years to shove forward 1m takes a bulldozer 5 seconds. A couple dump trucks can move in a day what took them 100 000 years.
You'll surely forgive people for thinking you just pick numbers out of the air. You don't, do you?
If you want to move soil glaciers are not the best means of doing so anymore.
Glaciers are free, though. Bulldozers are a cost.
No, grow the same things that the grow in similar climates today. It isn't going to be any worse than Arizona or Mexico, and they do just fine.
Drought conditions are pushing a lot of farms out of the competition down there. Rising prices might compensate for that, but do mean rising food prices. In a global market, where they might have non-agricultural ramifications. In holiday destinations, even. See what I mean about climate change not being a trivial issue?
The plants are already adapted to the climate. Irrigation is a last resort.
More like a Final Redoubt. What land
can be profitably irrigated
has been by now. When the blighted forests of British Columbia give way to wheatlands irrigation will be the least of the problems. Bulldozer rental prices will be a bitch.
We already deal with climates harsher than the ones proposed by the models. Some people don't find that alarming.
I hope "we" won't include me, because
I like the standard of living in the temperate zone. Subsistence level is not my cup of tea, even with a top-up from tourism. Which is likely to suffer if food-riots and army coups get too common.
Sweden and Norway aren't any basis for comparison to the US and Canada. It's no wonder Harper and the others just shake their heads when they hear people trying to relate them to us.
People just shake their heads at belief in north American exceptionalism. You are different, there's no doubting that, but not
exceptional.
lol, shut off the flow of hydrocarbons for a day, then see how much support their is for remuneration from the people and the governments. I'd say the longest a strike could last is about 3 days before this little fantasy would come to a screeching halt.
Call in the Pinkertons. Works every time.