A machine learning-coupled APSIM model pipeline for projected oil palm yield in Surat Thani, Thailand.
Jantaraprasit N, Promchote P, Wang SS, Daengnui S, Motlagh SK
Climate Adaptation
Oil palm is the world's most widely produced vegetable oil, and knowing how its yields will shift across decades shapes everything from rainforest clearing pressure to what fats end up in your cooking oil — this framework gives farmers and policymakers an eight-month early warning system to plan around.
Scientists created a step-by-step computer system that takes large-scale weather data, shrinks it down to farm-scale detail, and then feeds it into two models working together — one that simulates how plants grow and one that learns from past mistakes. When tested in a major oil palm region of Thailand, the combined system was nearly three times more accurate than the plant-growth model alone. Looking ahead to 2100, the forecasts suggest oil palms there will keep producing reliably, with only a small dip around mid-century before stabilizing.
Key Findings
The hybrid APSIM + Random Forest model reduced yield prediction error from 15.51 t/ha (model alone) to 2.74 t/ha (hybrid averaged across sites) — roughly a 6-fold improvement.
Seasonal yield forecasts driven by downscaled data matched the accuracy of those using observed reanalysis data, enabling reliable predictions up to eight months ahead.
CMIP6 climate projections show oil palm yields in southern Thailand remain stable or slightly higher early this century, dip modestly at mid-century, then stabilize again by 2100 — suggesting relative climate resilience.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers built a new forecasting system that combines climate modeling and machine learning to predict oil palm yields in southern Thailand with much greater accuracy. The results suggest oil palm production there is broadly resilient to climate change through the end of the century, with only a modest mid-century dip.
Abstract Preview
Accurate and timely forecasts of oil palm yield are essential for both short-term farm management and long-term adaptation planning, yet their reliability is often constrained by the coarse spatial...
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