Food Trade Disruption After Global Catastrophes

5

The authors examine how the global food trade system is vulnerable to major shocks such as abrupt sunlight reduction (from nuclear war or volcanic activity) or global infrastructure loss (from severe geomagnetic storms or pandemics). Using a network model, they find that a sunlight reduction event could cause most countries to lose 50%–100% of their food imports due to severe impacts on major exporting nations. In comparison, a catastrophic infrastructure failure would lead to more evenly distributed yield losses, reducing imports by roughly 25%–50%. The analysis shows that while both scenarios would severely disrupt global food trade, sunlight reduction poses the greater threat, underscoring the system’s vulnerability to systemic shocks and the urgent need for international preparedness and resilience planning.

Author(s)

Florian Ulrich Jehn, Łukasz G. Gajewski, Johanna Hedlund, Constantin W. Arnscheidt, Lili Xia, Nico Wunderling and David Denkenberger

Publication Date

30 September 2025

Publisher

European Geoscience Union

DOI / URL

5

Resource Type

Academic Journal Article

Systems Addressed

Food

Resource Theme

Systemic Risk

Uses the term polycrisis

Scroll to Top