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Malawi, a small landlocked country in southeast Africa, is home to 13 million people and relies on subsistence farming for stability.

In a recent study, researchers Kerry Cook and Ned Vizy at The University of Texas at Austin found that the agricultural growing season will be shorter by the mid 21st century due to climate change.

Long time users of TACC's resources, the researchers use the Stampede supercomputer to run climate models for 20-year time slice periods.

If Cook and Vizy's projections on how climate change will impact Malawi's growing season are true, it could mean that current crop types may be unsustainable using rain-fed agricultural practices alone.

TACC's Stampede supercomputer is funded by the National Science Foundation, grant #ACI-1134872.


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