Blog

What's New

Will extreme weather lead to multiple breadbasket failures and threaten global food security?

Dec 12th, 2025 • by Will Martin, Reza Nia, and Rob Vos

Currently, 80% of the world’s people rely on just three agricultural commodities as primary food staples: Maize, rice, and wheat. Production of these staple foods is concentrated in a small number of countries and regions, often called “breadbaskets.” At the same time, the incidence of climate-driven droughts, storms, floods, and related shocks is on the rise, creating large-scale threats to agricultural production in these areas. Recent research suggests that climate change will increase both the volatility of agricultural output and correlations across regions.

The future of climate change and food system research: 2025 Global Food Policy Report

Jun 16th, 2025 • by Sara Gustafson

The realities of a changing climate are becoming increasingly clear, with temperatures rising around the world and extreme weather events, like flooding and droughts, becoming more and more frequent. April 2025 was the second hottest April globally on record, and evidence suggests such anomalous high temperatures could become the norm rather than the exception.

Rising food insecurity, waning humanitarian assistance: 2025 Global Report on Food Crises released

May 16th, 2025 • by Sara Gustafson and Rob Vos

The world faced a stark inflection point in 2024, as the continued rise in the number of people facing crisis-to-catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity meets sharp reductions in funding for humanitarian assistance. The 2025 Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC), released today, reports that 295.3 million people across 53 countries/territories faced acute food insecurity in 2024. This represents a tripling of the number of people facing acute hunger since 2016 and a doubling since 2020 (Figure 1).

Figure 1

The Connection Between Climate Change and Malnutrition

Mar 2nd, 2025 • by Lilia Bliznashka and Elyse Iruhiriye

Climate change, malnutrition, and poor diets are interconnected. Without well-financed climate change adaptation plans and strategies global nutrition disparities could worsen.