Climate change: Fifteen times more people at risk of heat stress if temperatures rise by 3.6°F
Heat stress a mix of warmth and humidity will afflict fifteen times more people should global temperature rise exceed the 3.6F (2C) threshold. At present, some 68 million people worldwide are affected by heat stress, but the shift would see this , or one-in-every eight people. A 7.2F (4C) overall increase, meanwhile, would see half of the world's population living in areas that are at risk, a study from the UK has today warned. The findings come in a series of maps that explore which regions would be affected by five different climate effects under both 3.6F (2C) and 7.2F (4C) of warming. Based on data from an , the maps also explore the impacts of drought, river flooding and wildfire risk. The Met Office's analysis looking specifically at where the more severe impacts might overlap with each other and areas today most vulnerable to food insecurity. The experts found that areas in the tropics will be the worst affected with impacts from four or more of the hazards striking in countries like Brazil and Ethiopia. 'This new combined analysis shows the urgency of limiting global warming to well below 2.0C [3.6F],' said project leader and climate scientist Richard Betts of the Met Office and the University of Exeter. 'The higher the level of warming, the more severe and widespread the risks to peoples lives, but it is still possible to avoid these higher risks if we act now.' Humans are considered at 'extreme risk' of heat stress when the so-called wet bulb globe temperature which takes into account temperature, humidity, cloud cover, sun angle and wind speed exceeds 89.6F (32C). Above this threshold, the Met Office's Andy Hartley said, hourly rest periods are recommended to avoid heat exhaustion, with 'vulnerable members of the population and those with physical outdoor jobs at greater risk of adverse health effects.' 'Currently, the metric is met in several locations, such as parts of India,' he added. 'But our analysis shows that with a rise of 4.0C, extreme heat risk could affect people in large swathes of most of the world's continents.' 'Any one of the climate impacts presents a scary vision of the future,' said the Met Office's head of earth system and mitigation science, Andy Wiltshire. 'But, of course, severe climate change will drive many impacts, and our maps show that some regions will be affected by multiple factors. 'Perhaps unsurprisingly, parts of the tropics are most affected with countries like Brazil and Ethiopia potentially facing impacts from four of the hazards. 'Rapid emission reductions are required if we are to avoid worst consequences of unmitigated climate change.' 'These maps reveal areas of the world where the gravest impacts are projected to occur with higher levels of global warming,' said Met Office Hadley Centre director Albert Klein Tank. 'However, all regions of the world including the UK and Europe are expected to suffer continued impacts from climate change,' he warned. Next year, the will be publishing its Working Group II Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability report, including an assessment of the vulnerability of socio-economic systems to climate change.