If the average annual temperature of the Midwest rises by 4 degrees by 2050, what will happen to corn, soybean and other crops and to forests? Will climate change bring more droughts or more flooding? Will the power grid be able to handle increased demand for air conditioning?
Indiana University atmospheric science professor Sara Pryor has attempted to address some of those questions in her new book, “Climate Change in the Midwest: Impacts, Risks, Vulnerability and Adaptation,” published last month by IU Press.
She is also one of 60 members of the National Climate Assessment Development Advisory Committee, which has released a draft of the National Climate Assessment Report.
Pryor is a “convening lead author” for the chapter on the Midwest, making her a world authority on the projected impacts of climate change in the region.
The report intends to spell out the science and knowledge about climate change, to inform policy regarding how the effects can be lessened and how society can prepare to adapt to a very different environment, Pryor said in a recent interview.
“The rate of change of warming in the Midwest is alarming,” Pryor said. “It has warmed three times as quickly in the past three decades as it did in the century as a whole.”
Relative to 1970 to 2000 average temperatures, projections show the Midwest will warm by 3.8 to 4.9 degrees Fahrenheit by the middle of the century, and by 5.6 to 8.9 degrees by 2100, she said.