Obviously climate is a factor in food production.

However, climate change cannot be seen as a major factor in current
world food price increases, since production is still going up.

This will probably change eventually.

The message as far as I'm concerned is "you ain't seen nothin' yet."
That pistol is still loaded.

As for this:

> We have
> to consider (and model) more realistic mechanisms of responses to
> climate change.

well, I for one am trying to do exactly such things, but it isn't
easy. It's possible that in practice, any sensible adaptation in
advance of the actual change is limited in scope.

mt

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