Climate change is messing with everything from cargo shipping to French cheese
Dried-up rivers are bad news for everything — including industries: Droughts hitting the US, Europe, and China are having a dire impact on factory operations, agricultural production, with mns in risk of blackout, the Financial Times reports. Record-low water levels at the US’ Colorado Basin — an important water resource for Nevada, Arizona, and California — and the Rhine, Europe’s second-largest river, are holding up supply chains as cargo ships are at risk of running aground when fully loaded. The crisis is also felt in Italy, where drought and record lows at the Po River, the longest in the country, is impacting the country’s agricultural production. In China, several companies, including Toyota and Foxconn, suspended factory operation for at least a week over growing hydropower shortages. China’s crucial Yangtze River, the longest in Asia, reached its lowest level on record this month.
Is the beloved cotton t-shirt climate change’s next victim? Heat waves and heavy rains have eaten into the global cotton supply, cutting yields by 28-30% for the world’s largest exporters, executives at commodities players say, according to Bloomberg. The US and Brazil, the world’s largest suppliers accounting for half the world’s cotton exports, have been hit by extreme temperatures and drought sending stockpiles to near historic lows. Price hikes for the commodity jumped by 30% in response, affecting the costs of all related products like clothing, diapers and paper and leaving producers who sold in advance, missing out on the surge in value.
Another victim? This historic French cheese: Severe heat waves across Europe have also interrupted the 2,000-year seasonal production run of Salers, a French cheese from the central region of Auvergne that has survived two world wars and the fall of the Roman empire, according to The Washington Post.