Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1038/s41467-026-70700-z
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Global record-shattering breadbasket droughts emerge from moderately extreme regional events
Author Li, J.; Zscheischler, J. ORCID logo ; Bevacqua, E. ORCID logo
Source Titel Nature Communications
Year 2026
Department CHS; CER
Volume 17
Page From art. 2577
Language englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Supplements Supplement 1
Abstract Simultaneous droughts across multiple maize-producing regions can strike record-shattering portions of the global maize agricultural area, threatening global food security as the system is poorly adapted to large shocks. Yet the future probability of such global droughts remains unknown. Here, we close this gap by analyzing surface soil moisture data from large ensemble climate models under future emission scenarios. During 2026-2099, the chance of at least one such event is 52% (32–80%, range across models) under an intermediate emission scenario and 60% (32–100%) under high emissions, about seven to eleven times higher than expected if there were no long-term trends in soil moisture. These elevated probabilities are primarily driven by long-term drying in Brazil, Europe, and the USA. Interestingly, global record-shattering droughts do not emerge from simultaneous regional record-shattering events, but they mostly occur when several regions simultaneously face moderately extreme droughts relative to the new climate. These results demonstrate a high potential for an upcoming global record-shattering drought in crop-producing areas, an under-recognized risk for food security.
Li, J., Zscheischler, J., Bevacqua, E. (2026):
Global record-shattering breadbasket droughts emerge from moderately extreme regional events
Nat. Commun. 17 , art. 2577 10.1038/s41467-026-70700-z