Map of how climate change will affect farming. Hope you like more climate and food refugees

Map of how climate change will affect farming. Hope you like more climate and food refugees.

>refugees
Invaders. Not refugees. And we don't have to let them in.

suomi superpower by 2050?

we need to annex canada it seems

can someone run me through how increasing levels of plant growth hormone in the atmosphere and average temps wont increase plant growth?

>moves to innawoods in montana

Maybe Putin's Siberian land offer isn't such a bad idea.

Quebecois Masterace

>Invaders. Not refugees.
If you let them in, they're not invaders.

More like Uruguay

Russian grain and Canadian fruits/vegetables.

Also, map is obviously not taking into effect the extra rain caused by Australia's inland sea actually becoming more than a salt bed.

Loving it

Sweet my grandkids will be able to grow grapes.

Independance when?

Enjoy the day of the Lobster Pot, Nova Scotia will be a Superpower by 2050

Because muh feelz

New Hampshire agricultural master race reporting in.

>Being this retarded
>Flag

t. uneducated brainlet

Don't worry friend, the annexation if the US will be quick, but fierce.

>slightly higher temperatures
>longer growing seasons
>reduced yields
Can I get a quick rundown?

Could be from changes in precipitation and other factors

the numbers mean you would for example at extreme loss lose about 50 cucumbers in all supermarkets in your country, and at your best you can sell 50 more cucumbers in all your supermarkets
these numbers are negligible

>Implying that the climate changes
OP fell for the Jew science

>monsanto seeds suck ass
>monsanto seeds showing up in non GMO farms because obama regulation/being sneaky gits
>yields decreased
>oh look global warming strikes again.

Kek

...

Yeah, lets remove all co2 from the atmosphere. That'll help. Kys

>2010
And we've had 7 years of consecutive record breaking world crop yields since then.

QUEBEC WILL BE STRONK!

Weather and climate are pretty complicated. For example, there are three main types of rain: The first is frontal, which occurs where cold and warm fronts meet each other which is usually in temperate regions like the US/UK. The colder, dryer front pushes the warmer front up causing cloud formation and eventually rain.
The second is convectional, which occurs mostly in tropical regions. The sun warms up water, it evaporates, rises, condenses, and falls as rain.
The last is relief rain, where winds push clouds up mountains where they condense and form rain. This type is most common in high altitude areas.

Climate change would likely most heavily affect areas with frontal rain, since the front boundary would move towards the poles, taking frontal rain with it. Or push warmer fronts polewards, bringing more rain with them. Convectional rain would also be affected, since higher temperatures reduce humidity and could rainfall less frequent. Relief rain would mostly be affected through air currents changing which could take or bring clouds and warm, humid air. And all this is without taking sea currents, convergence zones, climate cells, or changing surface water content into account. And that's just rain.

Considering it's currently impossible to accurately predict the weather a month in advance, it's understandably hard to predict or even recognise any sort of long term change in climate.

well ... WE HAVE TO BUILD WALL

The whitest of mountains, oh, the promised land. Canaan! New Hampshire!

Droughts dude

No wonder my country became suddenly interesting.