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Home / Business / Business Reports

Agribusiness and Trade: Ryan Heneghan - 'A nuclear war cannot be won'

By Ryan Heneghan
Other·
30 Aug, 2022 04:59 PM5 mins to read

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Photo / AP

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Opinion

OPINION:

Even a relatively small nuclear war would create a worldwide food crisis lasting at least a decade in which hundreds of millions would starve, according to our new modelling published in Nature Food.

In a nuclear war, bombs dropped on cities and industrial areas would start firestorms, injecting large amounts of soot into the upper atmosphere. This soot would spread globally and rapidly cool the planet.

Although the war might only last days or weeks, the impacts on Earth's climate could persist for more than ten years. We used advanced climate and food production models to explore what this would mean for the world's food supply.

Conflicts between nuclear-armed powers are an ongoing concern in multiple parts of the world. If one of these conflicts escalated to nuclear war, how would it affect the world's food supply? And how would the impact on global food production and trade scale with the size of such a war? To try to answer these questions, we used simulations of the global climate coupled with models of major crops, fisheries and livestock production.

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These simulations let us assess the impacts of nuclear war on global food supply for 15 years after the conflict.

We simulated six different war scenarios, because the amount of soot injected into the upper atmosphere would depend on the number of weapons used.

The smallest war in our scenarios was a "limited" conflict between India and Pakistan, involving 100 Hiroshima-sized weapons (less than 3 per cent of the global nuclear arsenal). The largest was a global nuclear holocaust, in which Russia and the United States detonate 90 per cent of the world's nuclear weapons.

The six scenarios injected between 5m and 150m tonnes of soot into the upper atmosphere. For context, the Australian summer bushfires of 2019 — 20, which burned an area greater than the United Kingdom, injected about one million tonnes of smoke into the stratosphere.

Although we focused on India and Pakistan for our regional-scale war scenarios, the nuclear conflict involving other nations could result in similar amounts of smoke and thus similar climate impacts.

Widespread starvation

Across all scenarios, impacts on the world's climate would be significant for about a decade after a nuclear war. As a consequence, global food production would decline.

Even under the smallest war scenario, sunlight over global crop regions would initially fall by about 10 per cent, and global average temperatures would drop by up to 1-2C. For a decade or so, this would cancel out all human-induced warming since the Industrial Revolution.

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In response, global food production would decrease by 7 per cent in the first five years after a small-scale regional nuclear war. Although this sounds minor, a 7 per cent fall is almost double the largest recorded drop in food production since records began in 1961.

More than 250m people would be without food two years after the war.

Unsurprisingly, global nuclear war would be a civilisation-level threat, leaving over five billion people starving. Average global temperatures would fall by 10-15C in the first five years after the war, while sunlight would crash by between 50-80 per cent and rainfall over crop regions would drop by over 50 per cent. As a result, global food production from land and sea would fall to less than 20 per cent of pre-war levels and take over a decade to recover.

No such thing as limited nuclear war

A behavioural change could avert some starvation after a relatively small nuclear war, but only regionally. We found that reducing household food waste and diverting feed from livestock to humans would lessen a regional nuclear war's effect on food supply, but only in major food-exporting countries such as Russia, the United States and Australia.

Although great improvements have been made in recent decades, global food distribution remains a major challenge. Despite present-day food production is more than sufficient to nourish the world's population, over 700 million people suffered from undernutrition worldwide in 2020.

In a post-nuclear-war world, we expect global food distribution would cease entirely for several years, as exporting countries suspend trade and focus on feeding their own populations.

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This would make war-induced shortages even worse in food-importing countries, especially in Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

Our results point to a stark and clear conclusion: there is no such thing as a limited nuclear war, where impacts are confined to warring countries.

Our findings provide further support for the 1985 statement by US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev, which was reaffirmed by the current leaders of China, France, the UK, Russia and the US this year:
"A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought".

The Conversation
The Conversation

• Ryan Heneghan is a Lecturer in Mathematical Ecology at the Queensland University of Technology.
This article is republished from The Conversation.

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