The Hill published an article claiming climate change is threatening apple production in the United States. Data refutes this claim with apple yields increasing dramatically amid the recent modest warming. [emphasis, links added]
Apple production rises and falls from year to year, as other crops do, dependent upon a variety of factors, among them, weather, labor, economic, and often political conditions.
Also like most other crops, the evidence suggests that apples have benefitted from rising carbon dioxide and generally better growing conditions.
A climate staff writer for The Hill, Sharon Udasin, wrote an article titled “Climate change is hampering US apple quality and output: Study,” citing a single study as her evidence for asserting the claim climate change has harmed apple production.
The problem with Udasin’s claim is the climate has hardly changed in the regions she discusses. There are modestly warmer temperatures, with no notable increase in worsening weather.
As discussed in Climate at a Glance: U.S. Heatwaves, heat waves lasting four days or more have not increased in recent decades, but rather are much less frequent now than in the 1930s, 95 years ago. (See the figure below).
In fact, as the Earth has modestly warmed, winter nighttime temperatures have moderated and orchards suffer from fewer unexpected, late-season fruit- and nut-killing frosts.
The most robust evidence that climate change is not harming apple production comes from the production data itself, captured by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
The study Udasin cites examined apple production from 1979 to 2022.
Data from the FAO show that over the same time period, even as the acreage devoted to apple production declined by approximately 26 percent, apple production increased by about 23 percent, and yield, the best measure of crop productivity, grew by approximately 66 percent. (See the graph below)
So, by no measure has apple production been harmed during the recent period of modest climate change.
Any talk about what might happen in the future is pure speculation.
Any such speculation on Udasin’s part should reflect that, as explored in this Climate Realism post, the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Sixth Assessment Report does not predict worsening droughts or frost trends in the foreseeable future.
In addition, the authors of the study honestly admitted that any impacts from climate change on apple orchards can likely be mitigated or prevented through “adaptive measures.”
In the end, The Hill published an article implying that climate change was harming apple production, when, in fact, apple production and yields are increasing.
The Hill’s readers would be better served if, going forward in this age of highly politicized science, its writers sought out real-world data on any crop being discussed before referencing a single new report as proof of harm to a crop and quoting only its authors as if they were the sole arbiters of truth on the topic.
Top photo by Joanna Stołowicz on Unsplash/apple core added
Read more at Climate Realism
The climate change movement declares an emergency over very small increases in temperature. Such small increases can not be a factor in the climate. However, there is one area where it can have an impact, frost. Even slightly warmer temperatures can mean less frost. I own a noncommercial apple orchard at an elevation of 4100 feet. When there is frost too late in the year, there is almost of fruit. In a year without late frost, even those 100 year old trees are absolutely loaded. So a slight increase in temperature does not harm apple production, it is very good for it.
There has been a significant change in apple orchards, “dwarf” tree varieties have replaced the old trees. Yield has gone up as a result. If fruit tree farming was more profitable, there’s be more of it.
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