The Manila Times

Heat waves put millions of children in Asia at risk – UN

-

BANGKOK: Massive heat waves across East Asia and the Pacific could place millions of children at risk, the UN warned Thursday, calling for action to protect vulnerable people from the soaring temperatur­es.

Global monitors have warned that 2024 is shaping up to be the hottest year on record, marked by climate extremes and rising greenhouse gas emissions.

The Unicef data showed over 243 million children across the Pacific and East Asia were estimated to be affected by heat waves, putting them at risk of heat-related illnesses and death.

Several countries in the region are currently smoldering in the summer heat, with temperatur­es nearing record levels as they regularly hit over 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

Local forecaster­s are predicting steeper rises in the coming weeks.

Some Philippine schools suspended in-person classes in April, with the state weather forecaster saying temperatur­es could reach a “danger” level of 42 or 43 degrees Celsius in some parts of the country.

In Thailand, a temperatur­e of 43.5 degrees Celsius was recorded in the northern province of Mae Hong Son earlier this week — just a few degrees shy of the record of 44.6 degrees Celsius.

Around 40 people die from heatrelate­d illnesses annually, according to the Thai Ministry of Health.

And in February, neighborin­g Vietnam endured a monster heat wave in its southern “rice bowl” when temperatur­es reached up to 38 degrees Celsius — an “abnormal” high for the period.

According to the Unicef report, children are more at risk than adults as they are less able to regulate their body temperatur­e.

“Children are more vulnerable than adults to the effects of climate change, and excess heat is a potentiall­y lethal threat to them,” said Debora Comini, director of Unicef Regional Office for East Asia and the Pacific.

The report said heat waves and high humidity levels — commonly experience­d in the region — can have a deadly effect as the heat will “hinder the body’s natural cooling mechanisms.”

“We must be on high alert this summer to protect children and vulnerable communitie­s from worsening heat waves and other climate shocks,” Comini said.

The UN projected that over 2 billion children are expected to be exposed to heat waves by 2050.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines