It's not just the winter salads which are a problem. As we see
in the press, the UK and Germany are half the market for Spanish veg and Broccoli is impacted and other veg too. Not just on the shelves, but this is also a time when they freeze the veg for our freezers.
What this article does not mention, directly, is that the excessive humidity attacks other produce like tomatoes, ruining those crops.
There is another impact too. Crops which have been washed away have been replanted but that then knocks on to later in the season when other root veg will have to be planted later.
The UK gets 60% of its “veg” (full stop), from Spain. Carrots, cabbage, cauliflower, peppers, Onions and more. This winter crop failure will knock on into the spring and summer. Whilst we can source veg from elsewhere in the world, California is currently in the grip of one of its worst droughts. Short term in fill supply it can give but longer term supplies are tenuous.
In the medium term it just means our veg is going to be more expensive. In the longer term, we’re relying on the weather. That is driven by climate and the last three years have been a constant litany of “warmest year on record” with 2016 not just being the warmest but being the warmest by the largest margin ever recorded. Right after 2015 which was also the warmest by the largest margin ever recorded.
The future, as I see it, is not really that rosy and food security is a real issue.
Of course…. I would turn it to my own hobby horse. If we did rise and fall tidal islands, instead of tidal lagoons, we could have rise and fall tidal farms growing our food on the west coast under the balmy aid of the gulf stream..
Just a thgought...