Agroclimate Future Explorer

Agroclimate Future Explorer · Free · No signup

Where your farmland is going — by 2030, 2050, 2060.

Pick a country and agroclimatic zone. Scrub the decade. Test trade scenarios. See which crops gain suitability, which lose it, how logistics, input costs, land price, and investment access reshape margin, and which zones land funds and operators should be watching for the next 20 years.

62 zones across 36 countries Decade snapshots 2020-2060 3 trade scenarios Land price + yield gap + investment access PDF export
Biggest gainer · by 2050 crop fit · this zone
Biggest loser crop fit · this zone
Climate signal heat stress days vs 2020 baseline

Global viewAll 62 zones · by 2050

least most

Climate · this zone · 2020

Growing-degree days base · GDD₁₀
Season length base · frost-free days
Annual rainfall base · mm
Heat stress days base · days >35°C
Agroclimatic zone:

Zone economics · this zone

Trade risk · top crops in this zone

Crops in this zone · winners & losers vs 2020

Gaining

Losing

Crop fit 0 25 50 75 100 Click a row to focus a crop

In short

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What this is. Decade snapshots built from leading climate-model ensembles, established crop-suitability frameworks, authoritative commodity-price indices, and international trade-flow statistics. Trade scenarios use conservative price-shock magnitudes from past export-disruption events. Country-level — not field-level.

What it isn’t. A forecast. A guarantee. A field-level recommendation. For the climate trajectory of your actual fields and the rotation that fits, see the next step.
Apply to your fields
geopard.tech

Country-zone resolution is the start. GeoPard runs this at the field.

This page works at the agroclimatic-zone level. The full GeoPard platform combines your actual yield, soil tests, NDVI, and real elevation into per-field management zones, then generates variable-rate prescriptions that respect the local climate trajectory and rotation logic.

Push prescriptions and pull as-applied data with:
John Deere Operations Center CNH FieldOps AGCO / PTx FarmEngage
Register free in GeoPard →

Frequently asked questions

Why split big countries into multiple agroclimatic zones?

Big countries span fundamentally different climates. The US Corn Belt (Iowa, Illinois) and the US Cotton Belt (Mississippi, Alabama) sit in different agroclimatic conditions: different soils, growing seasons, dominant crops, and trade flows. A single national average hides the signal entirely.

The tool currently splits 36 countries into 62 agroclimatic zones. The US has nine (Corn Belt, Cotton Belt, Mississippi Delta, Pacific Northwest, California Central, Northern Plains, Southern Plains, Lake States, Northeast). Ukraine has six (Polissia, Forest-Steppe, Steppe, Black Sea Coast, Carpathian, Podillia). Africa is covered through Côte d’Ivoire cocoa belt, Ethiopian + Kenyan highlands, Nigerian savanna, Egyptian Nile Delta, Moroccan Atlas, Zambian commercial belt, the South African Highveld and Western Cape. Asia-Pacific now covers India, China, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Turkey, and Israel. Latin America adds Argentina, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico. Brazil, India, China, Australia, and Canada all carry multiple zones. Each map marker carries a dataset that matches what a farmer or planner in that specific zone actually faces.

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