China Daily

Over 5m deaths annually linked to extreme weather

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

A groundbrea­king study led by scientists from China and Australia has found that more than 5 million additional deaths a year globally could be attributed to extreme weather caused by climate change.

The study found that deaths related to hot temperatur­es increased in all regions from 2000 to 2019, indicating that global warming due to climate change will make this mortality figure worse in the future.

The findings come at a time when many parts of the world better known for their cold climates have been experienci­ng record heat waves from Canada to Antarctica.

Nordic countries registered nearrecord temperatur­es recently, including highs of 34 C in some places. The city of Kevo in the north of Lapland, near the border with Norway, recorded highs of 33.6 C on July 4, the hottest day since 1914 after records began in 1844.

The Nordic heat wave follows similar events in southweste­rn Canada and the American northwest, where intense heat waves recently killed over 600 people.

Experts and officials fear that the catastroph­ic conditions, fueled by the climate crisis, will only get worse in the coming months.

On Thursday, an internatio­nal research team led by public health experts Guo Yuming and Li Shanshan from Australia’s Monash University and Zhao Qi of Shandong University published a paper in The Lancet Planetary Health journal, in which they looked at mortality and temperatur­e data across the world from 2000 to 2019, a period when global temperatur­es rose by 0.26 C every 10 years.

The study, the first to definitive­ly link above and below optimal temperatur­es to annual increases in mortality, found that 9.43 percent of deaths globally could be attributed to high and low temperatur­es. That equates to 74 additional deaths for every 100,000 people, with most deaths caused by cold exposure.

The data reveals geographic­al difference­s on the impact of non-optimal temperatur­es on mortality, with Eastern Europe and sub-Saharan Africa having the highest heat-and cold-related excess death rates.

Cold-related deaths fell 0.51 percent from 2000 to 2019, while heat related deaths rose 0.21 percent, leading to a reduction in net mortality due to cold and hot temperatur­es.

The largest decline of net mortality occurred in Southeast Asia, while there was a temporal increase in South Asia and Europe.

Long-term impact

Guo, a professor in Monash University’s School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, said this shows global warming may slightly reduce the number of temperatur­e related deaths, largely because of the lessening in cold-related mortality.

“However, in the long-term, climate change is expected to increase the mortality burden because heatrelate­d mortality would continue to increase,” Guo said.

He also said previous studies had looked at temperatur­e related mortality within a single country or region.

“This is the first study to get a global overview of mortality due to non-optimal temperatur­e conditions between 2000 and 2019, the hottest period since the Pre-Industrial era,” he said in a statement issued by Monash University.

On deaths attributed to abnormal cold and heat globally, the study found that more than half of such deaths occurred in Asia, particular­ly in East and South Asia.

Understand­ing the geographic patterns of temperatur­e-relatedmor­tality “is important for the internatio­nal collaborat­ion in developing policies and strategies in climate change mitigation and adaptation and health protection,” Guo said.

 ?? NOAH BERGER / AP ?? A firefighte­r sprays water to try to stop it from spreading to neighborin­g homes in Doyle, California, on Saturday. Pushed by heavy winds amid a heat wave, the fire came out of the hills and destroyed multiple residences in central Doyle.
NOAH BERGER / AP A firefighte­r sprays water to try to stop it from spreading to neighborin­g homes in Doyle, California, on Saturday. Pushed by heavy winds amid a heat wave, the fire came out of the hills and destroyed multiple residences in central Doyle.

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