Bloomberg: Global food output may be hurt as climate change brings more extreme weather over the next decade, with China likely set for harsher droughts and North America getting heavier rain, said the World Meteorological Organization.
"Extreme events will become more intense in the future, especially the heat waves and extreme precipitations,' Omar Baddour, a division chief at the United Nations' agency, said in a phone interview from Geneva. "That, combined with less rainfall in some regions like the......
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Global Food Output May Be Hurt as Climate Shifts, U.N. Warns
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on May 26th, 2011
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