Shahnila Islam
International Food Policy Research Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Shahnila Islam.
Environmental Research Letters | 2015
Keith Wiebe; Hermann Lotze-Campen; Ronald D. Sands; A.A. Tabeau; Dominique van der Mensbrugghe; Anne Biewald; Benjamin Leon Bodirsky; Shahnila Islam; Aikaterini Kavallari; Daniel Mason-D’Croz; Christoph Müller; Alexander Popp; Richard Robertson; Sherman Robinson; Hans van Meijl; Dirk Willenbockel
Previous studies have combined climate, crop and economic models to examine the impact of climate change on agricultural production and food security, but results have varied widely due to differences in models, scenarios and input data. Recent work has examined (and narrowed) these differences through systematic model intercomparison using a high-emissions pathway to highlight the differences. This paper extends that analysis to explore a range of plausible socioeconomic scenarios and emission pathways. Results from multiple climate and economic models are combined to examine the global and regional impacts of climate change on agricultural yields, area, production, consumption, prices and trade for coarse grains, rice, wheat, oilseeds and sugar crops to 2050. We find that climate impacts on global average yields, area, production and consumption are similar across shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP 1, 2 and 3, as we implement them based on population, income and productivity drivers), except when changes in trade policies are included. Impacts on trade and prices are higher for SSP 3 than SSP 2, and higher for SSP 2 than for SSP 1. Climate impacts for all variables are similar across low to moderate emissions pathways (RCP 4.5 and RCP 6.0), but increase for a higher emissions pathway (RCP 8.5). It is important to note that these global averages may hide regional variations. Projected reductions in agricultural yields due to climate change by 2050 are larger for some crops than those estimated for the past half century, but smaller than projected increases to 2050 due to rising demand and intrinsic productivity growth. Results illustrate the sensitivity of climate change impacts to differences in socioeconomic and emissions pathways. Yield impacts increase at high emissions levels and vary with changes in population, income and technology, but are reduced in all cases by endogenous changes in prices and other variables.
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2017
Amanda Palazzo; Joost Vervoort; Daniel Mason-D’Croz; Lucas Rutting; Petr Havlik; Shahnila Islam; Jules Bayala; Hugo Valin; Hamé Abdou Kadi Kadi; Philip Thornton; Robert B. Zougmoré
Graphical abstract
Regional Environmental Change | 2017
Arnout van Soesbergen; Andrew P. Arnell; Marieke Sassen; Benjamin Stuch; Rüdiger Schaldach; Jan Göpel; Joost Vervoort; Daniel Mason-D’Croz; Shahnila Islam; Amanda Palazzo
Abstract Competition for land is increasing as a consequence of the growing demands for food and other commodities and the need to conserve biodiversity and ecosystem services. Land conversion and the intensification of current agricultural systems continues to lead to a loss of biodiversity and trade-offs among ecosystem functions. Decision-makers need to understand these trade-offs in order to better balance different demands on land and resources. There is an urgent need for spatially explicit information and analyses on the effects of different trajectories of human-induced landscape change in biodiversity and ecosystem services. We assess the potential implications of a set of plausible socio-economic and climate scenarios for agricultural production and demand and model-associated land use and land cover changes between 2005 and 2050 to assess potential impacts on biodiversity in Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. We show that different future socio-economic scenarios are consistent in their projections of areas of high agricultural development leading to similar spatial patterns of habitat and biodiversity loss. Yet, we also show that without protected areas, biodiversity losses are higher and that expanding protected areas to include other important biodiversity areas can help reduce biodiversity losses in all three countries. These results highlight the need for effective protection and the potential benefits of expanding the protected area network while meeting agricultural production needs.
International Journal of Water Resources Development | 2013
Shahnila Islam
information pertaining to the subject areas. Because it is well written and organized, with effective language and a lucid presentation, it can be accessible to researchers, policy makers, and general readers alike. From an academic perspective, it can be good supplementary reading for agricultural economics, natural resource and environmental economics, and area studies pertaining to India and Asia.
Archive | 2015
Sherman Robinson; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Timothy B. Sulser; Shahnila Islam; Ricky Robertson; Tingju Zhu; Arthur Gueneau; Gauthier Pitois; Mark W. Rosegrant
Archive | 2015
Sherman Robinson; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Shahnila Islam; Nicola Cenacchi; Bernardo Creamer; Arthur Gueneau; Guy Hareau; Ulrich Kleinwechter; Khondoker Abdul Mottaleb; S Nedumaran; Ricky Robertson; Mark W. Rosegrant; Gbegbelegbe Sika; Timothy B. Sulser; Keith Wiebe
Environmental Modelling and Software | 2016
Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Joost Vervoort; Amanda Palazzo; Shahnila Islam; Steven Lord; Ariella Helfgott; Petr Havlik; Rathana Peou; Marieke Sassen; Veeger M; Arnout van Soesbergen; Andrew P. Arnell; Benjamin Stuch; Aslihan Arslan; Leslie Lipper
Archive | 2013
Amanda Palazzo; Lucas Rutting; Robert B. Zougmoré; Joost Vervoort; Petr Havlik; Abdulai Jalloh; Ernst Aubee; Ariella Helfgott; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Shahnila Islam; Polly J. Ericksen; Zénabou Segda; Abdoulaye S. Moussa; Jules Bayala; Hamé Abdou Kadi Kadi; Pierre C. Sibiry Traoré; Philip K. Thornton; Hugo Valin
Global Food Security | 2016
Shahnila Islam; Nicola Cenacchi; Timothy B. Sulser; Sika Gbegbelegbe; Guy Hareau; Ulrich Kleinwechter; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; S Nedumaran; Richard Robertson; Sherman Robinson; Keith Wiebe
Archive | 2014
Amanda Palazzo; Joost Vervoort; Petr Havlik; Daniel Mason-D'Croz; Shahnila Islam
Collaboration
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International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
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