The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Extreme weather ‘could kill up to 152,000’ in Europe

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EXTREME weather could kill up to 152,000 people yearly in Europe by 2100 if nothing is done to curb the effects of climate change, scientists say.

The number is 50 times more deaths than reported now, the study in The Lancet Planetary Health journal said.

Heat waves would cause 99 percent of all weather-related deaths, it added, with southern Europe being worst affected.

Experts said the findings were worrying but some warned the projection­s could be overestima­ted.

If nothing is done to cut greenhouse gas emissions and to improve policies to reduce the impact against extreme weather events, the study by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre says:

◆ Deaths caused by extreme weather could rise from 3,000 a year between 1981 and 2010 to 152,000 between 2071 and 2100.

◆ Two in three people in Europe will be affected by disasters by 2100, against a rate of one in 20 at the start of the century.

◆ There will be a substantia­l rise in deaths from coastal flooding, from six victims a year at the start of the century to 233 a year by the end of it. The research analysed the effects of the seven most dangerous types of weather-related events - heat waves, cold snaps, wildfires, droughts, river and coastal floods and windstorms — in the 28 EU countries as well as Switzerlan­d, Norway and Iceland.

The team looked at disaster records from 1981 to 2010 to estimate population vulnerabil­ity, and combined this informatio­n with prediction­s of how climate change might progress and how population­s might increase and migrate.

They assumed a rate of greenhouse gas emissions that would lead to average global warming of 3C (5.4F) by the end of the century from levels in 1990, a pessimisti­c forecast well above targets set by the Paris Agreement on tackling climate change. “Climate change is one of the biggest global threats to human health of the 21st century, and its peril to society will be increasing­ly connected to weather-driven hazards,” said Giovanni Forzieri, one of the authors of the study. “Unless global warming is curbed as a matter of urgency and appropriat­e measures are taken, about 350 million Europeans could be exposed to harmful climate extremes on an annual basis by the end of the century.” — BBC

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