Study blames global warming for over 1 in 3 heat-related deaths

Scientists involved in the study warn heat death numbers will grow exponentially with rising temperatures.

The deaths were caused by higher temperatures from human-caused warming, the study showed [File: David Gray/Reuters]

More than one-third of the world’s heat deaths each year are directly due to global warming, according to the latest study to calculate the human cost of climate change.

But scientists say that is only a sliver of climate change’s overall toll – even more people die from other extreme weather amplified by global warming such as storms, flooding and drought – and the heat death numbers will grow exponentially with rising temperatures.

Dozens of researchers who looked at heat deaths in 732 cities around the globe from 1991 to 2018 calculated that 37 percent were caused by higher temperatures from human-caused warming, according to a study published on Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change.

That amounts to about 9,700 people a year from just those cities, but it is much more worldwide, the study’s lead author said.

“These are deaths related to heat that actually can be prevented. It is something we directly cause,” said Ana Vicedo-Cabrera, an epidemiologist at the Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Bern in Switzerland.

The highest percentages of heat deaths caused by climate change were in cities in South America.

Vicedo-Cabrera pointed to southern Europe and southern Asia as other hotspots for climate change-related heat deaths.

Sao Paulo, Brazil, has the most climate-related heat deaths, averaging 239 a year, researchers found.

‘Negative’ health effects

About 35 percent of heat deaths in the United States can be blamed on climate change, the study found. That is a total of more than 1,100 deaths a year in about 200 US cities, topped by 141 in New York. Honolulu had the highest portion of heat deaths attributable to climate change, 82 percent.

Scientists used decades of mortality data in the 732 cities to plot curves detailing how each city’s death rate changes with temperature and how the heat-death curves vary from city to city. Some cities adapt to heat better than others because of air conditioning, cultural factors and environmental conditions, Vicedo-Cabrera said.

Then researchers took observed temperatures and compared them with 10 computer models simulating a world without climate change. The difference is warming humans caused.

By applying that scientifically accepted technique to the individualised heat-death curves for the 732 cities, the scientists calculated extra heat deaths from climate change.

“People continue to ask for proof that climate change is already affecting our health. This attribution study directly answers that question using state-of-the-science epidemiological methods, and the amount of data the authors have amassed for analysis is impressive,” said Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin.

Patz, who was not part of the study, said it was one of the first to detail climate change-related heat deaths now, rather than in the future.

“Climate change is not something in the distant future,” senior author Antonio Gasparrini, a professor of biostatistics and epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told the AFP news agency.

“We can already measure negative impacts on health, in addition to the known environmental and ecological effects,” Gasparrini said.

Deadly heatwaves that might have occurred once a century before climate change kicked in could, by mid-century, happen far more frequently, scientists warn.

The burgeoning field of attribution climate science measures by how much, for example, a typhoon’s intensity, a drought’s duration, or a storm surge’s destruction has been amplified by global warming.

But little research has tried to do the same for human health, notes Dan Mitchell, a researcher at the Cabot Institute for the Environment at the University of Bristol.

“This shift in thinking is essential … so that global leaders can understand the risks,” he said in a comment in Nature Climate Change.

Source: News Agencies

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