On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios

We present the results of study of a possible relationship between the space weather and terrestrial markets of agricultural products. It is shown that to implement the possible effect of space weather on the terrestrial harvests and prices, a simultaneous fulfillment of three conditions is required...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lev Pustilnik, Gregory Yom Din
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1301.6334
id ftrepec:oai:RePEc:arx:papers:1301.6334
record_format openpolar
spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:arx:papers:1301.6334 2024-04-14T08:13:52+00:00 On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios Lev Pustilnik Gregory Yom Din http://arxiv.org/pdf/1301.6334 unknown http://arxiv.org/pdf/1301.6334 preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:34:34Z We present the results of study of a possible relationship between the space weather and terrestrial markets of agricultural products. It is shown that to implement the possible effect of space weather on the terrestrial harvests and prices, a simultaneous fulfillment of three conditions is required: 1) sensitivity of local weather (cloud cover, atmospheric circulation) to the state of space weather; 2) sensitivity of the area of specific agricultural crops to the weather anomalies (belonging to the area of risk farming); 3) relative isolation of the market, making it difficult to damp the price hikes by the external food supplies. Four possible scenarios of the market response to the modulations of local terrestrial weather via the solar activity are described. The data sources and analysis methods applied to detect this relationship are characterized. We describe the behavior of 22 European markets during the medieval period, in particular, during the Maunder minimum (1650-1715). We demonstrate a reliable manifestation of the influence of space weather on prices, discovered in the statistics of intervals between the price hikes and phase price asymmetry. We show that the effects of phase price asymmetry persist even during the early modern period in the U.S. in the production of the durum wheat. Within the proposed approach, we analyze the statistics of depopulation in the eighteenth and nineteenth century Iceland, induced by the famine due to a sharp livestock reduction owing to, in its turn, the lack of foodstuff due to the local weather anomalies. A high statistical significance of temporal matching of these events with the periods of extreme solar activity is demonstrated. We discuss the possible consequences of the observed global climate change in the formation of new areas of risk farming, sensitive to space weather. Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description We present the results of study of a possible relationship between the space weather and terrestrial markets of agricultural products. It is shown that to implement the possible effect of space weather on the terrestrial harvests and prices, a simultaneous fulfillment of three conditions is required: 1) sensitivity of local weather (cloud cover, atmospheric circulation) to the state of space weather; 2) sensitivity of the area of specific agricultural crops to the weather anomalies (belonging to the area of risk farming); 3) relative isolation of the market, making it difficult to damp the price hikes by the external food supplies. Four possible scenarios of the market response to the modulations of local terrestrial weather via the solar activity are described. The data sources and analysis methods applied to detect this relationship are characterized. We describe the behavior of 22 European markets during the medieval period, in particular, during the Maunder minimum (1650-1715). We demonstrate a reliable manifestation of the influence of space weather on prices, discovered in the statistics of intervals between the price hikes and phase price asymmetry. We show that the effects of phase price asymmetry persist even during the early modern period in the U.S. in the production of the durum wheat. Within the proposed approach, we analyze the statistics of depopulation in the eighteenth and nineteenth century Iceland, induced by the famine due to a sharp livestock reduction owing to, in its turn, the lack of foodstuff due to the local weather anomalies. A high statistical significance of temporal matching of these events with the periods of extreme solar activity is demonstrated. We discuss the possible consequences of the observed global climate change in the formation of new areas of risk farming, sensitive to space weather.
format Report
author Lev Pustilnik
Gregory Yom Din
spellingShingle Lev Pustilnik
Gregory Yom Din
On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
author_facet Lev Pustilnik
Gregory Yom Din
author_sort Lev Pustilnik
title On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
title_short On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
title_full On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
title_fullStr On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
title_full_unstemmed On Possible Influence of Space Weather on Agricultural Markets: Necessary Conditions and Probable Scenarios
title_sort on possible influence of space weather on agricultural markets: necessary conditions and probable scenarios
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1301.6334
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://arxiv.org/pdf/1301.6334
_version_ 1796311944803647488