Heat-related deaths could more than quadruple by mid-century -report
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[November 15, 2023]
By Gloria Dickie
(Reuters) - Heat-related illnesses and deaths are rising as the world
warms, an international team of health experts said on Tuesday,
forecasting a 370% surge in yearly heat deaths by mid-century if the
world warms by 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.
Already, at roughly 1.1C (2F) of warming, people experienced about 86
days of health-threatening high temperatures on average in 2022, the
report from the Lancet medical journal found.
People over 65 have been the most vulnerable to soaring temperatures,
with deaths in this age group attributed to rising temperatures up 47%
in the past decade compared with how many people died during the period
from 1991 to 2000.
The findings, assembled by more than 100 experts from 52 different
research institutions and United Nations agencies including the World
Health Organization, deepen concerns over the health impacts posed by
heat.
A study earlier this year indicated that some 61,000 people were likely
to have died during European heatwaves in the summer of 2022.
"We are paying in lives," report executive director Marina Romanello
said of the world's inaction on climate change.
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Women take shelter from the searing sun near a construction site in
Ahmedabad, India, April 28, 2023. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File
Photo
The Lancet report, the eighth of its
kind to assess how climate change is affecting health outcomes
globally, also found that heat exposure may have led to 490 billion
lost labor hours in 2022, up nearly 42% from the 1991 to 2000
period.
More frequent heatwaves could also cause food
insecurity for an additional 525 million people by mid-century.
The United Nations' annual climate change conference, COP28, in
Dubai later this month will focus in part on health impacts for the
first time.
Some 46 million health professionals have called on the COP28
presidency to push for a phaseout of fossil fuels.
(Reporting by Gloria Dickie in London; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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