Western Mail

‘Two billion exposed to dangerous heat by 2100’

- REBECCA SPEARE-COLE newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

CURRENT climate policies will leave more than a fifth of humanity exposed to dangerousl­y hot temperatur­es by 2100, unpreceden­ted new research suggests.

The paper, published yesterday and co-authored by academics from around the world, examines the “human climate niche” – the temperatur­e range in which humans have lived and flourished throughout history – and how warming could see billions of people falling outside it.

The researcher­s from University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute, alongside the Earth Commission and Nanjing University, argue that current legally binding climate policies are estimated to produce an average temperatur­e rise of 2.70C by 2100.

They said this could leave two billion people – 22% of the projected end-of-century population – exposed to dangerous heat, defined as an average annual temperatur­e of 290C or higher.

At these high temperatur­es, water resources could become strained, mortality could increase, economic productivi­ty could decrease, animals and crops could no longer flourish, and large numbers of people may migrate.

However, the forecasts also show that limiting warming to 1.50C in line with the Paris Climate Agreement would leave just 5% outside the niche by 2100, highlighti­ng “the importance of decisive action” to limit the human costs and inequities of climate change.

Professor Tim Lenton, director of the Global Systems Institute, said that many areas of the world will “go up to unpreceden­ted temperatur­es that nobody experience­d in the historical climate” when warming hits 2.70C.

More than 600 million people in India and 300 million people in Nigeria could be exposed to dangerous temperatur­es by 2100, as well as areas of Indonesia, Brazil, the Philippine­s, Australia, and almost 100% of Burkina Faso and Mali.

The research found that under the worst-case scenarios of 3.60C or even 4.40C global warming, half of the world’s population could be left outside the climate niche, posing an “existentia­l risk”.

Prof Lenton said limiting warming to 1.50C makes a “profound difference” to forecasts, with those exposed to dangerous heat decreasing from more than two billion people to a little over 400 million people.

“The costs of global warming are often expressed in financial terms, but our study highlights the phenomenal human cost of failing to tackle the climate emergency,” he said.

“For every 0.10C of warming above present levels, about 140 million more people will be exposed to dangerous heat.

“This reveals both the scale of the problem and the importance of decisive action to reduce carbon emissions.

“Limiting global warming to 1.5C rather than 2.70C would mean five times fewer people in 2100 being exposed to dangerous heat.”

The researcher­s said their paper highlights the inequity of climate crisis as the people least responsibl­e for greenhouse emissions could face the most exposure to dangerous heat.

They also found the lifetime emissions of 3.5 average global citizens today – or just 1.2 US citizens – expose one future person to dangerous heat.

“We were triggered by the fact that the economic costs of carbon emissions hardly reflect the impact on human wellbeing,” said Professor Marten Scheffer, of Wageningen University, who co-authored the report.

“Our calculatio­ns now help bridging this gap and should stimulate new questions about justice.”

Prof Scheffer said that migration would be a “very natural adaptation” to the changing world.

He said: “It’s not like Earth is becoming unliveable, it’s just the best place on Earth for humans is changing.”

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