Arab Times

What rising temperatur­es mean for ‘human’ health

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BANGKOK, April 12, (RTRS): In 2016, the Earth experience­d its hottest year since the 1880s when modern records began, marking the third consecutiv­e year of recordhigh temperatur­es. Less than four months into 2017, parts of Australia and India are already in the throes of heat waves.

While sunny skies may be synonymous with summer fun in some parts of the world, too much heat can be fatal.

It is estimated that between 15,000 and 19,000 people died during France’s heat wave of 2003, while the United States’ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said some 600 Americans died every year from exposure to extreme heat between 1999 and 2010.

The Thomson Reuters Foundation spoke to half a dozen climate scientists to understand what rising temperatur­es mean for human health. Here are some key facts and figures:

Hotter days and nights, and heat waves will become more common. Multiple studies have found that heat waves are happening more frequently, while cold spells declined in urban areas in the last 40 years.

Extreme heat can cause heatrelate­d illnesses, such as heat stroke and exhaustion, and increase mortality. It can also exacerbate existing health conditions. Heat stress occurs when the body absorbs more heat than is tolerable.

The total number of days on which heat reaches “health-threatenin­g levels” will rise rapidly over the next several decades, noted one study by the Institute for Social and Environmen­tal Transition-Internatio­nal (ISET-Internatio­nal) and the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research (NCAR).

Urban centres in the developing world will be hit hardest. They tend to be hotter than rural areas due to factors including population density,

pollution from industrial activities, and the presence of buildings and machinery that create heat. This “urban heat island” effect is well known, but will worsen with rising temperatur­es.

New population­s will become heat-stressed while those already exposed to dangerous levels of heat will be subject to harmful conditions more often, scientists say.

With a temperatur­e rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius, cities in China, India, Bangladesh, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Vietnam and Myanmar will regularly start to experience heat stress, according to the UK study.

If global temperatur­e rise hits 2.7 degrees Celsius, Tokyo, Beijing and Manila will also be affected, while a 4 degree rise would see New York and Rio de Janeiro join the club.

Southeast Asia faces a 16 percent loss of labour capacity in the next three decades due to heat stress, said a study by risk consultanc­y Verisk Maplecroft.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has estimated that without adaptation measures, there will be nearly 65,000 additional deaths annually among people over 65 due to heat exposure in 2030, with the greatest impacts in Asia-Pacific.

Humidity levels and night-time temperatur­es play an important — but often neglected — role, because they influence the body’s ability to cool down. Daytime peak temperatur­es can be dealt with partially by seeking shade and sweating, but it is harder to act at night.

According to the WHO, ideal room temperatur­e should be below 32 degrees Celsius during the day and under 24 degrees Celsius at night.

Rice, Asia’s staple food, is highly susceptibl­e to heat stress, with yields plummeting if temperatur­es are above 35 degrees Celsius for 10 days during the reproducti­ve stage.

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