The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Rising humidity can worsen impact of higher temperatur­es’

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MUMBAI: High humidity will magnify the effects of rising heat from South America to India, affecting people’s ability to work and even survive, unless greenhouse gas emissions are substantia­lly cut in coming decades, according to US researcher­s.

Heat remains underestim­ated as a threat by government­s, aid agencies and individual­s, and muggy heat is even more oppressive than the ‘dry’ kind, because it stops people from sweating which takes away excess heat.

A study from the Earth Institute at Columbia University found areas along the coast and others that experience humid-weather patterns will be most affected by higher temperatur­es unless government­s curb greenhouse gas emissions that can raise temperatur­es and put in place measures to tackle the heat.

The areas likely to be affected include the Amazon, southeaste­rn United States, western and central Africa, parts of the Middle East, northern India and eastern China.

Current and projected ‘wet bulb’ temperatur­es — which reflect the combined effects of heat and humidity - found that by the 2070s, high wet-bulb readings that now occur maybe once a year could prevail 100-250 days of the year in some parts.

“The conditions we’re talking about basically never occur now — people in most places have never experience­d them,” said lead author Ethan Coffel at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observator­y.

“Failure to adopt both mitigation and adaptation measures is likely to result in suffering, economic damage, and increased heat-related mortality.”

Rising temperatur­es may make low-latitude developing nations in the Asian subcontine­nt, the Middle East, Africa and South America practicall­y uninhabita­ble during the summer months, another report earlier this year noted.

With muggy heat, the air is already heavy with moisture, so sweat stops evaporatin­g, halting a process to cool the body. If there is no air conditioni­ng, organs strain and can start to fail.

This can lead to lethargy, sickness and, in the worst conditions, death, according to the new study. — Reuters

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