Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Fatalities due to extreme heat on the rise: Studies

- Bloomberg

NEW YORK: More than 356,000 people died in 2019 as a result of extreme heat and that number is likely to grow, according to a study published in The Lancet this week.

The Global Burden of Disease review, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, found while cold temperatur­es still cause a greater number of deaths, mortality rates attributab­le to heat are growing faster, particular­ly in hotter regions of the world.

“This is very concerning, particular­ly given the risk of exposure to high temperatur­es appears to have been increasing steadily for decades,” said co-author Katrin Burkart from the University of Washington.

The findings echo another report, a two-part series called “Heat and Health” that was also published in The Lancet this week. It calls for global warming to be limited to 2.7°F (0.8°C approximat­ely), in line with the Paris Climate Accords, to reduce heat-related mortality in the future.

Otherwise, deaths will increase further and extreme heat will also lessen worker productivi­ty and exacerbate other environmen­tal challenges, such as wildfires, researcher­s said.

“The effects extreme heat exposure can have on the body present a clear and growing global health issue,” said Ollie Jay, a professor from the University of Sydney, and a co-author of the Heat and Health report.

In addition to causing heat stroke, high temperatur­es have been linked to increased hospitaliz­ations and mental health issues. Older people and other vulnerable groups, such as those with low mobility, are likely to be more at risk.

High temperatur­es can also reduce productivi­ty. Around 1 billion workers, many engaged in manual labour, often report lower output due to heat stress.

Mitigation

Even with strategies to slow climate change and reduce carbon emissions, environmen­tally sustainabl­e changes need to be made to adapt to an increasing­ly hotter world. Measures that can be taken to mitigate the heat’s worst effects on health include increasing the amount of green

space in cities, putting wall coatings that can reflect heat on buildings, and using more cooling and misting fans. While airconditi­oning is becoming more available, not everyone can afford it and it can harm the environmen­t.

“With more than half of the global population projected to be exposed to weeks of dangerous heat every year by the end of this century, we need to find ways to cool people effectivel­y and sustainabl­y,” said Kristie Ebi, a professor from the University of Washingon and co-lead author of the Heat and Health study.

Heatwaves, wildfires

The studies come on the back of heat waves and forest fires across the US, Europe and north Africa -- blamed by scientists on climate crisis.

Intense heat and forest fires have killed dozens in Algeria and in Turkey. Hundreds of wildfires have also burned across Greece this month, fuelled by the country’s longest and most severe heat wave in decades. Italy too has seen several fire-related deaths. Last week, Israeli firefighte­rs worked for a third consecutiv­e day to contain a wildfire that has consumed a large swath of forest west of Jerusalem and threatened several communitie­s. Worsening drought and heat — linked to climate change — have also fuelled wildfires this summer in the western US and in Russia’s northern Siberia region.

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