女生小视频

Environment

Climate change to blame for 37 per cent of world鈥檚 heat-related deaths

By Adam Vaughan

31 May 2021

fan and man

Hot weather at the Australian Open tennis tournament in January 2019

SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images

Climate change is to blame for an average 37 per cent of heat-related deaths globally in the past three decades, according to researchers who say their finding is a reminder global warming is already having severe impacts.

Every continent saw an increase in deaths from heat linked to climate change over the period, but the percentage of heat deaths linked to climate change varied widely across the world.

The proportion was much higher in Central and South American countries including Guatemala and Colombia, and more than 50 per cent in Kuwait and Iran in the Middle East, and the Philippines in South-East Asia. The percentages were much lower in the US and Canada, and much of Europe.

鈥淭he main message is climate change is not something that will come in the future. It鈥檚 already happening, and we can quantify the negative impacts,鈥 says 鈥 at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, one of the research team.

The team took temperature and mortality data from 43 countries between 1991 and 2018, and modelled a counterfactual world without the 1.1掳C of warming the world has seen to date. The difference was used to estimate the number of climate-linked heat deaths.

To account for people in different parts of the world being acclimatised to different heat extremes, the researchers tailored the risk of death from rising temperatures for all 732 locations in the study, so high temperatures in Berlin resulted in a greater increase in deaths than in Johannesburg.

at the University of Reading, UK, who wasn’t involved in the research, says the study is timely given the . 鈥淚t also shows how quicker action in the past to limit emissions would have led to fewer heat-related deaths,鈥 she says.

However, Brimicombe believes that the study’s estimate, of 9702 deaths a year linked to heat caused by climate change, is an underestimate of the true death toll, because the research only looked at the four warmest months in each country. 鈥淗eat-related deaths have and do occur outside these months. This is especially true in the tropics where heat extremes can occur all year,” she says.

There are other reasons the real number may be higher too. Gasparrini says the big caveat to the work is that the team was were unable to source data for large parts of the world. Most of Africa and the whole of India, two of the most heat-afflicted regions on Earth, were omitted because data was unavailable.

at the University of Oxford, who has , says it matters that much of the world map in the study is empty. “In most countries in the world, heatwaves are not recorded at all,” she says. “This paper shows we do not have enough data and, importantly, awareness, to quantify the impacts of climate change on lives.”

Moreover, we know worse is coming in the future: many studies have projected heat-related deaths will rise as climate change accelerates in the coming decades.

Nature Climate Change

Sign up to our free Fix the Planet newsletter to get a dose of climate optimism delivered straight to your inbox, every Thursday

Topics:

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with New 女生小视频 events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop