Too hot to handle?: Expect more heat waves due to climate change: experts
LONDON: The effects of climate change mean the world can expect higher temperatures and more frequent heat waves, climate experts have warned, with poor communities likely to be worst affected.
Heat is neglected because it is both an invisible and hard-to-document disaster that claims lives largely behind closed doors, they said, and because hot weather does not strike many people as a serious threat.
The warning comes as hot weather has swept the northern hemisphere. Britain has sweltered in a prolonged heat wave, with temperatures set to test national records, the country´s Meteorological Office said. “We will have to get used to these kinds of summers,” said Friederike Otto, deputy director at the Environmental Change Institute at Oxford University.
“There is no doubt that there is a link to climate change. We need to take heat waves seriously around the world as something that we need to adapt to,” Otto told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Fires have also caused devastation in Greece, Sweden and the United States.
In Greece, rescuers are searching scorched land and the coastline for survivors three days after a wildfire destroyed a village outside Athens killing at least 82 people.
The past three years were the hottest on record, the United Nations´ World Meteorological Organization said in March. The World Health Organization says heat stress, linked to climate change, is likely to cause 38,000 extra deaths a year worldwide between 2030 and 2050.
Two weeks into Japan´s blistering heat wave, at least 80 people have died and thousands have been rushed to emergency rooms, as officials urged citizens to stay indoors to avoid temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104°F) in some areas.
In a heat wave in May, more than 60 people died in Karachi, Pakistan, when the temperature rose above 40C (104F).
“Heat waves are becoming more frequent, and that is likely due to climate change because the global temperature is rising,” Sven Harmeling, head of climate change and resilience policy at aid group CARE International, said by phone. He said climate change was altering weather patterns, and “we have to prepare for more of these consequences”.
Stanford University researchers on Monday said hotter weather was linked to increases in suicides, after examining decades worth of temperature data against suicide rates in US counties and Mexican municipalities, some dating back to the 1960s. The report projected that if global warming were not capped by 2050, there could be at least an additional 21,000 suicides in the US and Mexico alone.
In 2015, countries signing the Paris Agreement set a goal of limiting a rise in average world surface temperatures to “well below” 2C (3.6F) above pre-industrial times, while “pursuing efforts” to limit rising temperatures to 1.5C (2.7F).
-
FAA Shuts Down El Paso Airport, Flights Suspended For 10 Days: Here’s Why -
Kate Middleton, Prince William's Major Plan Revealed After Statement On Andrew Scandal -
Teacher Abused Children Worldwide For 55 Years, Kept USB Log Of Assaults -
Nick Jonas Set To Showcase Acting Skills In Upcoming Thriller 'Bodyman' -
Milano-Cortina 2026: Assessing Italy’s Winter Olympics Economic Growth -
Chris, Liam Hemsworth Support Their Father Post Alzheimer’s Diagnosis -
Savannah Guthrie Expresses Fresh Hope As Person Detained For Questioning Over Kidnapping Of Nancy -
ByteDance Suspends Viral Seedance 2.0 Photo-to-voice Feature: Here’s Why -
Tom Hanks Diabetes 2 Management Strategy Laid Bare -
Bad Bunny Wins Hearts With Sweet Gesture At Super Bowl Halftime Show -
Why Angelina Jolie Loves Her 'scars' Following Double Mastectomy -
‘World Is In Peril’: Anthropic AI Safety Researcher Resigns, Warns Of Global Risks -
Meghan Markle Receives Apology As Andrew Puts Monarchy In Much Bigger Scandal -
Catherine O’Hara Becomes Beacon Of Hope For Rectal Cancer Patients -
Nancy Guthrie: Is She Alive? Former FBI Director Shares Possibilities On 10th Day Of Kidnapping -
Siemens Energy Profit Surges Nearly Threefold Amid AI Boom For Gas Turbines, Grids