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6 key EU food imports exposed to biodiversity loss and climate change
6 key EU food imports exposed to biodiversity loss and climate change

Euronews

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Euronews

6 key EU food imports exposed to biodiversity loss and climate change

Six of Europe's key food imports are under increasing threat from biodiversity loss and climate change, a new report warns. Commissioned by philanthropic initiative the European Climate Foundation, UK consultants Foresight Transitions examined the vulnerability of staple crops maize, rice and wheat, as well as cocoa, coffee and soy - key commodities for EU agrifood production and exports. They found that more than half the imports of these six foodstuffs were from climate vulnerable countries with limited resources to adapt. For three - wheat, maize and cocoa - two-thirds of imports come from countries whose biodiversity is deemed not to be intact. 'These aren't just abstract threats,' says lead author of the report, Camilla Hyslop. 'They are already playing out in ways that negatively affect businesses and jobs, as well as the availability and price of food for consumers, and they are only getting worse.' As the world's biggest producer and exporter of chocolate, it is the EU's chocolate industry - worth an estimated €44 billion - that faces the biggest threat from these twin environmental factors. Around 97 per cent of chocolate's primary ingredient, cocoa, comes from countries with a low-medium or below climate score, as per the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Index. This tool combines a country's vulnerability to climate damages with its access to financial and institutional support. And 77 per cent of cocoa comes from countries with a medium or below biodiversity rating, according to a ranking of biodiversity intactness from the UK's Natural History Museum, which compares the current abundance of wild species to pre-modern levels. The researchers mapped trade data from Eurostat onto these two rankings of environmental security for all six commodities. In the case of cocoa, European imports come from a few main countries in West Africa - Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria - all of which are experiencing overlapping and intensifying climate and biodiversity impacts. 'The European Union has forked out an increasing price for cocoa imports as a result of these environmental pressures, with the total value of imports increasing by 41 per cent over the last year,' says Hyslop. 'The increasing value has also been driven by climate-related increases in the price of sugar, highlighting the environmental 'double whammy' facing not only chocolatiers but other kinds of producers using multiple environmentally-sensitive inputs.' Chocolate prices have gone up 43 per cent in the last three years, according to a recent analysis by green think tank Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU), with 'chocflation' evident on supermarket shelves. While previous studies have assessed the climate vulnerability of food imports, the new research stands out for its focus on biodiversity loss and how these two environmental factors interact. 'Climate impacts are made worse by declining biodiversity, which leave farms and surrounding ecosystems far less resilient to climate and other shocks,' explains Hyslop. 'Not only are less biodiverse farms less resilient to crop disease - these diseases often emerge due to decreased biodiversity.' On top of this, yields are diminished by the clearing of native vegetation, which can alter local microclimates. While practices such as monocropping - where a crop like wheat is exclusively grown - deplete the soil on which food production depends. One response to this rising insecurity in Europe's supply chains is to produce more food on the continent. But, argues Dr Mark Workman, director of Foresight Transitions and co-author of the report, this 'reshoring' would by itself be a wholly insufficient response. 'Not only would the EU struggle to grow some of these commodities in large quantities, it is facing its own climate and biodiversity threats - not to mention the unpalatable land-use implications of significant reshoring of food production.' Hyslop underscores the global nature of the climate crisis, too. While higher rainfall in 2024 left cocoa rotting in West Africa, she writes, floods in the UK and France decreased wheat production, and high temperatures in Eastern Europe disrupted maize crops - making imports crucial for food security. 'It is therefore entirely in the self-interest of EU policymakers to get serious about investing in the climate resilience of partner producers as well as overseas trading infrastructure such as ports that support this trade and are also subject to environmental stresses,' adds Workman. 'This is an important message to convey at a time when overseas aid budgets are often being pitted against investments in defence and security - but the truth is they are two sides of the same coin.' Policy recommendations the report sets out include measures to support smallholder farmers, who supply the majority of cocoa to the EU. And, 'the most obvious' one, strong climate mitigation policies, which will have positive benefits for all supplier countries.

Chocolate industry faces mounting supply threats from global warming: Report warns
Chocolate industry faces mounting supply threats from global warming: Report warns

Express Tribune

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Express Tribune

Chocolate industry faces mounting supply threats from global warming: Report warns

Listen to article Climate breakdown and biodiversity loss are exposing the European Union to mounting risks in its food supply chains, with cocoa imports at the heart of what experts have called a 'chocolate crisis,' a new report said on Tuesday. The analysis by UK-based consultancy Foresight Transitions found that more than two-thirds of key food imports into the EU in 2023 came from countries ill-prepared for climate change. The study mapped Eurostat trade data against environmental readiness scores from the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Index and biodiversity rankings from the UK's Natural History Museum. It identified six key commodities – cocoa, coffee, soy, rice, wheat and maize – as particularly vulnerable. Cocoa stood out as the most exposed. The EU sourced nearly 97% of its cocoa imports from countries with poor climate preparedness and 77% from nations with degraded biodiversity. 'These aren't just abstract threats,' said Camilla Hyslop, lead author of the report. 'They are already affecting prices, availability, and jobs — and it's only getting worse.' Most cocoa comes from West African nations, where rising temperatures, unpredictable rains, and biodiversity decline are combining to stress farming systems. The report argued that large chocolate manufacturers should invest in climate adaptation and biodiversity protection — not just as a sustainability effort, but as a risk management strategy. 'This is not an act of altruism,' the report noted, 'but a vital derisking exercise.' Ensuring fair prices for farmers, it added, would allow investment in climate resilience on the ground. EU maize and wheat imports were also heavily reliant on countries with medium to low environmental readiness, according to the study. Maize was especially vulnerable, with 90% of imports coming from countries with poor climate scores. Environmental experts warn the trend undermines the EU's assumption of food security. 'This paints an extremely worrying picture,' said Paul Behrens, a food systems expert at the University of Oxford. 'The EU likes to think of itself as self-sufficient, but the data show deep dependencies on fragile ecosystems abroad.' The report, commissioned by the European Climate Foundation, also flagged concerns around coffee, soy and rice. Uganda, for example, which supplied 10% of the EU's coffee last year, scored low on climate readiness and biodiversity intactness. Ugandan coffee farmer advocate Joseph Nkandu called for increased access to international climate finance to help smallholders cope with erratic weather patterns. 'The weather in Uganda is no longer predictable,' he said. 'Our coffee bushes are suffering from prolonged dry spells and unseasonal rains.' Oxford researcher Marco Springmann, who was not involved in the report, said deeper reform of food systems was needed. 'Resilience isn't just about stabilising current supply chains,' he said. 'We also need to move away from overreliance on crops like soy, which are primarily used to feed livestock.'

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