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Could prairie farmers actually benefit from global warming?

Riders and their horses pass through a canola field as they take an afternoon trail ride near Cremona, Alta., on July 19, 2016.
Riders and their horses pass through a canola field as they take an afternoon trail ride near Cremona, Alta., on July 19, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

BANFF, Alta. – An economist studying global food supply says farmers on the Canadian Prairies are “literally” the only agricultural winners on the planet as a result of global warming.

Lutz Goedde, a partner with McKinsey and Co. in Denver, says rising temperatures and longer growing seasons mean that ever-increasing areas of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba will be able to switch to corn and soybeans from wheat and canola.

READ MORE: 7 major changes the Prairies will see as the climate warms 

The new crops add to farm profitability, he said during a presentation at the Global Business Forum in Banff, Alta.

The benefits are already being seen in higher average prices for farmland.

READ MORE: Statue of Liberty, Easter Island among World Heritage sites threatened by climate change: UNESCO

Goedde says climate change is a net negative factor globally as it hurts food production, causes water shortages and enables the spread of diseases.

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He says the world will need to produce 40 per cent to 50 per cent more food in the next 20 years to account for population growth and a growing taste for higher protein diets in emerging economies like China and India.

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