• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Climate Attribution

  • Home
  • Search
    • Climate Change Attribution
    • Extreme Event Attribution
    • Impact Attribution
    • Source Attribution
    • Court Attribution
  • About
    • Contact
    • Sitemap
  • Related Resources
    • Conference – January 9-10, 2025
  • Subscribe

Climate change alters impacts of extreme climate events on a tropical perennial tree crop

Summary/Abstract

Anthropogenic climate change causes more frequent and intense fluctuations in the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Understanding the effects of ENSO on agricultural systems is crucial for predicting and ameliorating impacts on lives and livelihoods, particularly in perennial tree crops, which may show both instantaneous and delayed responses. Using cocoa production in Ghana as a model system, the authors analyse the impact of ENSO on annual production and climate over the last 70 years. The authors report that in recent decades, El Niño years experience reductions in cocoa production followed by several years of increased production, and that this pattern has significantly shifted compared with prior to the 1980s. ENSO phase appears to affect the climate in Ghana, and over the same time period, the study sees corresponding significant shifts in the climatic conditions resulting from ENSO extremes, with increasing temperature and water stress. The authors attribute these changes to anthropogenic climate change, and the study’s results illustrate the big data analyses necessary to improve understanding of perennial crop responses to climate change in general, and climate extremes in particular.

Creedy, T.J., Asare, R.A., Morel, A.C. et al. Climate change alters impacts of extreme climate events on a tropical perennial tree crop. Sci Rep 12, 19653 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-22967-7

View Resource
November 2022
Thomas J. Creedy, Rebecca A. Asare, Alexandra C. Morel, Mark Hirons, John Mason, Yadvinder Malhi, Constance L. McDermott, Emmanuel Opoku, Ken Norris
Nature Scientific Reports
Peer-reviewed Study
Ghana
Climate Change Attribution
Climate Change Attribution → Cross-cutting Research
Climate Change Attribution → Temperature
Climate Change Attribution → Oceans
Impact Attribution
Impact Attribution → Agriculture

Footer

This website provides educational information. It does not, nor is it intended to, provide legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is established by use of this site. Consult with an attorney for any needed legal advice. There is no warranty of accuracy, adequacy or comprehensiveness. Those who use information from this website do so at their own risk.

© 2026 Sabin Center for Climate Change Law
Made with by Satellite Jones