Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5049686 Ecological Economics 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We determine blue and green water savings or consumption due to agricultural trade.•The analysis is performed on a grid-cell level to consider climate-induced variations.•Blue water changes combined with water scarcity give a value to the impact of trade.•Countries in Middle East and South Asia profit by importing water consuming goods.•Agricultural trade deteriorates local water scarcity in Southern Europe.

International trade of agricultural goods impacts local water scarcity. By quantifying the effect of trade on crop production on grid-cell level and combining it with cell- and crop-specific virtual water contents, we are able to determine green and blue water consumption and savings. Connecting the information on trade-related blue water usage to water shadow prices gives us the possibility to value the impact of international food crop trade on local blue water resources. To determine the trade-related value of the blue water usage, we employ two models: first, an economic land- and water-use model, simulating agricultural trade, production and water-shadow prices and second, a global vegetation and agricultural model, modeling the blue and green virtual water content of the traded crops. Our study found that globally, the international trade of food crops saves blue water worth 2.4 billion US$. This net saving occurs despite the fact that Europe exports virtual blue water in food crops worth 3.1 billion US$. Countries in the Middle East and South Asia profit from trade by importing water intensive crops, countries in Southern Europe on the other hand export water intensive agricultural goods from water scarce sites, deteriorating local water scarcity.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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