Tag Archives: heat waves

Extreme heat is exhausting and expensive

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Extreme heat is exhausting and expensive

By on Jul 21, 2016Share

It’s July, the month where the whole world collectively reaches for the nearest chilled beverage. Work be damned: Hordes of city-dwellers are relocating to the seaside, celebrities frolic in Ibiza, and most of us in the continental United States are tethered to the air conditioner right now.

Just kidding — first-world problems are the least of our worries in the middle of this 14-month global heat streak. It turns out that increasingly hot summers are going to wreak total havoc on some countries’ GDP, as excessively high temperatures make working during peak daylight hours impossible.

According to a just-released United Nations study, poorer workers and manual laborers are especially affected by heat stress. In developing countries, fewer working hours can translate into serious economic strain. In Southeast Asia, heat is already cutting work hours by 15 to 20 percent. By 2050, that number could be as high as 40 percent.

“It’s a whole working month that would be lost because it’s so hot you can’t work,” the report’s coauthor Tord Kjellstrom told the Washington Post. If global warming continues at its current rate, extreme heat could cost global economies $2 trillion by 2030.

Though excess heat primarily affects poor or middle-income countries, the report also notes that more prosperous countries such as Sweden, Norway, and Russia could see their working hours impacted by extreme winters.

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Extreme heat is exhausting and expensive

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El Niño Could Grow Into a Monster, New Data Show

A powerful El Niño could worsen droughts, intensify heat waves, and contribute to dangerous flooding. alika1712/Thinkstock The odds are increasing that an El Niño is in the works for 2014—and recent forecasts show it might be a big one. As we learned from Chris Farley, El Niños can boost the odds of extreme weather (droughts, typhoons, heat waves) across much of the planet. But the most important thing about El Niño is that it is predictable, sometimes six months to a year in advance. That’s an incredibly powerful tool, especially if you are one of the billions who live where El Niño tends to hit hardest—Asia and the Americas. If current forecasts stay on track, El Niño might end up being the biggest global weather story of 2014. Read the rest at Slate. Taken from:  El Niño Could Grow Into a Monster, New Data Show ; ;Related ArticlesFrame Climate Change as a Food Issue, Experts SayWATCH: Is This Man the Greenest Governor in America?To Fight Climate Change, the Entire World Will Have to Eat Less Meat ;

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El Niño Could Grow Into a Monster, New Data Show

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Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll

Climate change-related deaths may be even worse than these researchers are projecting. Washington Square Park, by marccappelletti/Flickr Despite the modern advances of central air and cooling centers, record-hot weather still regularly kills people all over the world. A 2010 heat wave in Russia was blamed for killingabout 55,000 people. An earlier one, in 2003, claimed 70,000 across Europe. And an infamously scorching stretch of the summer of 1995 in Chicago killed about 750. Climate change brings with it the threat that such natural disasters could happen more often, with higher death tolls, as late spring and early fall start to feel more like summer, and as summer itself gets worse. Cities are particularly vulnerable, given the urban heat island effect (we also know that certain neighborhoods within most cities are at particularly grave risk). Temperatures around New York City, for example, increased by about 2 degrees Celsius between 1901 and 2000 – a rate that was higher than the national average. Exactly how bad the heat waves will get will depend on some uncertain factors, like how fast global populations rise and how successful we are at curbing greenhouse gasses. But researchers at Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the Mailman School of Public Health have at least attempted to come up with some estimates. In new research published in the journal Nature Climate Change, they downscale future temperature projections for the island of Manhattan using 16 climate models under two scenarios (one assumes rapid global population growth and scant attempts to limit emissions; the other assumes slower growth and technological advances that slow emissions by 2040). In all 32 scenarios, compared to a baseline set in the 1980s, heat-related deaths in Manhattan go up, in some cases by as much as 90 percent by the year 2080. And these projections take into account that there will be fewer cold-related deaths from climate change. The net effect, though, still looks gruesome. The biggest jump in deaths, these models suggest, will come from “the months surrounding summer,” those stretches of May and September that we seldom associate today with heat waves. The chart at left, from the paper, shows the percent change in heat-related deaths, averaged across 16 models, in the 2080s relative to the 1980s. All of those summertime deaths also clearly wipe out any any positive changes in the wintertime death toll. The reality in the future may be even worse than these researchers are projecting. This study doesn’t take into account changes in demographics, and New York City (along with the rest of the country) will age in the coming decades. The study also doesn’t consider how air quality may worsen with climate change. But then again, we never know what technology (and health care) may bring us in the next 70 years. These early projections, though, should be enough to get us thinking now about how to get ready. Link to article: Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll ; ;Related ArticlesOklahoma Tornado: Is Climate Change to Blame?Dot Earth Blog: A Survival Plan for America’s Tornado Danger ZoneVIDEO: The Secret Life of Trolls ;

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Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll

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