The Borneo Post

Changing demographi­cs may alter climate vulnerabil­ity — Researcher­s

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LONDON: Factors such as changing migration rates and life expectancy - beyond simple estimates of population increases - could help scientists predict more precisely how climate change will impact people in the future, researcher­s said yesterday.

For instance, data suggests that life expectancy in Europe could rise by almost 20 years by 2100, while Asia’s sex ratio, now skewed toward more boys, could almost even out over the same period, the scientists wrote in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Such difference­s will be important for assessing the vulnerabil­ity of population­s to climate change and could help avoid misleading conclusion­s, said Raya Muttarak, a demographe­r with the Internatio­nal Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, based in Austria.

Scientists “tend to not concede the fact that the socioecono­mic and demographi­c components will change in the future”, Muttarak said in an interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation. But “as demographe­rs, we can forecast this”.

Right now, when assessing vulnerabil­ity to climate change, many scientists use data solely based on future population sizes, she and colleague Wolfgang Lutz said. But more specific data could help better anticipate how the world will look and act 100 years down the road, the analysts said.

Their organisati­on has made prediction­s on the age, gender, population,andeducati­onalmakeup of about 195 countries through 2100, including both developed and undevelope­d countries. The data is available online.

Muttarak said the inclusion of demographi­c shifts in climate research has been ‘ neglected’ simply because many scientists do not know the data is available. — Reuters

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