# The potential impact of wheat stem rust on global agricultural supply, demand, and food security, considering market interactions

**Authors:** Benjamin Schiek, Athanasios Petsakos, Mesut Keser, Nicola Cenacchi, Timothy B. Sulser, Keith Wiebe

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0338959 · PLOS One · 2026-02-10

## TL;DR

Wheat stem rust, a fungal disease, could threaten global wheat supply and food security, with market responses both mitigating and worsening impacts in different regions.

## Contribution

An integrated assessment of wheat stem rust's economic and food security impacts, including market spillover effects, using expert-driven scenarios.

## Key findings

- Global markets may offset worst impacts of wheat stem rust in affected areas through international trade.
- Market responses can cause food insecurity in non-epidemic regions due to resource reallocation.
- Expert-driven scenarios reveal complex interactions between wheat stem rust and global market dynamics.

## Abstract

Wheat stem rust, a fungal disease that can be highly devastating under the right environmental conditions, was reduced to non-economically damaging levels during the Green Revolution. However, it has reemerged as a global threat to wheat production due to the appearance of new virulent strains in Uganda in 1999 that have spread steadily to other geographic areas. Wheat experts warn that the disease could pose a catastrophic threat to the global wheat supply if not monitored. Considering the importance of wheat as a principal source of calories, nutrients, and farm income throughout the world, assessments of the potential impacts of the disease are urgently required in order to formulate an appropriate response. Published assessments so far vary widely in method and results, and generally focus on wheat production losses alone, without considering how markets may offset or aggravate impacts (spillover effects). Here we take an integrated assessment approach and examine a set of “what-if” scenarios to account for direct and indirect economic and food security impacts of wheat stem rust in various world regions over the years 2026–2050. The severity and frequency of epidemics is introduced into the modeling framework based on a survey of international wheat experts. The results suggest that global market incentives may offset the worst impacts of wheat stem rust in most affected areas via international trade. However, the market mechanism simultaneously precipitates considerable food insecurity in areas far from any epidemic, as farms in these areas reallocate resources from the domestic cereal market to the wheat export market, in response to price signals.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fungal disease (MESH:D009181)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12890143/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12890143