Manila Bulletin

Heat projected to kill nearly five times more people by 2050

- By DANIEL LAWLER

PARIS, France (AFP) – Nearly five times more people will likely die due to extreme heat in the coming decades, an internatio­nal team of experts warned on Wednesday, adding that without action on climate change the “health of humanity is at grave risk.”

Lethal heat was just one of the many ways the world's still-increasing use of fossil fuels threatens human health, according to The Lancet Countdown, a major annual assessment carried out by leading researcher­s and institutio­ns.

More common droughts will put millions at risk of starving, mosquitoes spreading farther than ever before will take infectious diseases with them, and health systems will struggle to cope with the burden, the researcher­s warned.

The dire assessment comes during what is expected to be the hottest year in human history – just last week, Europe's climate monitor declared that last month was the warmest October on record.

It also comes ahead of the COP28 climate talks in Dubai later this month, which will for the first time host a “health day” on Dec. 3 as experts try to shine a light on global warming’s impact on health.

Despite growing calls for global action, energy-related carbon emissions hit new highs last year, the Lancet Countdown report said, singling out still massive government subsidies and private bank investment­s into planet-heating fossil fuels.

Crisis on top of a crisis

Last year people worldwide were exposed to an average of 86 days of life-threatenin­g temperatur­es, according to the Lancet Countdown study. Around 60 percent of those days were made more than twice as likely due to climate change, it said.

The number of people over 65 who died from heat rose by 85 percent from 1991-2000 to 2013-2022, it added.

“However these impacts that we are seeing today could be just an early symptom of a very dangerous future,” Lancet Countdown's executive director Marina Romanello told journalist­s.

Under a scenario in which the world warms by two degrees Celsius by the end of the century – it is currently on track for 2.7C – annual heat-related deaths were projected to increase 370 percent by 2050. That marks a 4.7-fold increase.

Around 520 million more people will experience moderate or severe food insecurity by mid-century, according to the projection­s.

And mosquito-borne infectious diseases will continue to spread into new areas. The transmissi­on of dengue would increase by 36 percent under a 2C warming scenario, according to the study.

Meanwhile, more than a quarter of cities surveyed by the researcher­s said they were worried that climate change would overwhelm their capacity to cope.

“We're facing a crisis on top of a crisis,” said Lancet Countdown’s Georgiana Gordon-strachan, whose homeland Jamaica is currently in the middle of a dengue outbreak.

Staring down the barrel

“People living in poorer countries, who are often least responsibl­e for greenhouse gas emissions, are bearing the brunt of the health impacts, but are least able to access funding and technical capacity to adapt to the deadly storms, rising seas and crop-withering droughts worsened by global heating,” she said.

UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres responded to the report by saying that “humanity is staring down the barrel of an intolerabl­e future.”

“We are already seeing a human catastroph­e unfolding with the health and livelihood­s of billions across the world endangered by record-breaking heat, cropfailin­g droughts, rising levels of hunger, growing infectious disease outbreaks, and deadly storms and floods,” he said in a statement.

Dann Mitchell, climate hazards chair at the UK’S Bristol University, lamented that “already catastroph­ic” health warnings about climate change had “not managed to convince the world’s government­s to cut carbon emissions enough to avoid the first Paris Agreement goal of 1.5C.”

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