One billion people will live in insufferable heat
within 50 years – study
Human cost of climate crisis will hit harder and
sooner than previously believed, research reveals
Jonathan
Watts
@jonathanwatts
Tue 5 May
2020 09.52 BSTFirst published on Tue 5 May 2020 09.34 BST
The human
cost of the climate crisis will hit harder, wider and sooner than previously
believed, according to a new study that shows a billion people will either be
displaced or forced to endure insufferable heat for every additional 1C rise in
the global temperature.
In a
worst-case scenario of accelerating emissions, areas currently home to a third
of the world’s population will be as hot as the hottest parts of the Sahara
within 50 years, the paper warns. Even in the most optimistic outlook, 1.2
billion people will fall outside the comfortable “climate niche” in which humans
have thrived for at least 6,000 years.
The authors
of the study said they were “floored” and “blown away” by the findings because
they had not expected our species to be so vulnerable.
“The
numbers are flabbergasting. I literally did a double take when I first saw
them, ” Tim Lenton, of Exeter University, said. “I’ve previously studied
climate tipping points, which are usually considered apocalyptic. But this hit
home harder. This puts the threat in very human terms.”
There will be more change in the next 50 years
than in the past 6,000 years
Instead of
looking at climate change as a problem of physics or economics, the new paper,
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, examines how
it affects the human habitat.
The vast
majority of humanity has always lived in regions where the average annual
temperatures are around 11C (52F) to 25C (77F), which is ideal for human health
and food production. But this sweet spot is shifting and shrinking as a result
of manmade global heating, which drops more people into what the authors
describe as “near unliveable” extremes.
Humanity is
particularly sensitive because we are concentrated on land – which is warming
faster than the oceans – and because most future population growth will be in
already hot regions of Africa and Asia. As a result of these demographic
factors, the average human will experience a temperature increase of 7.5C when
global temperatures reach 3C, which is forecast towards the end of this
century.
At that
level, about 30% of the world’s population would live in extreme heat – defined
as an average temperature of 29C (84F). These conditions are currently
extremely rare outside the most scorched parts of the Sahara, but with global
heating of 3C, they are projected to envelop 1.2 billion people in India, 485
million in Nigeria and more than 100 million in each of Pakistan, Indonesia and
Sudan.
This would
add enormously to migration pressures and pose challenges to food production
systems.
“I think it
is fair to say that average temperatures over 29C are unliveable. You’d have to
move or adapt. But there are limits to adaptation. If you have enough money and
energy, you can use air conditioning and fly in food and then you might be OK. But
that is not the case for most people,” said one of the lead authors of the
study, Prof Marten Scheffer of Wageningen University.
An
ecologist by training, Scheffer said the study started as a thought-experiment.
He had previously studied the climate distribution of rainforests and savanna
and wondered what the result would be if he applied the same methodology to
humans. “We know that most creatures’ habitats are limited by temperature. For
example, penguins are only found in cold water and corals only in warm water.
But we did not expect humans to be so sensitive. We think of ourselves as very
adaptable because we use clothes, heating and air conditioning. But, in fact,
the vast majority of people live – and have always lived – inside a climate
niche that is now moving as never before.”
We were
blown away by the magnitude,” he said. “There will be more change in the next
50 years than in the past 6,000 years.”
The authors
said their findings should spur policymakers to accelerate emission cuts and
work together to cope with migration because each degree of warming that can be
avoided will save a billion people from falling out of humanity’s climate
niche.
“Clearly we
will need a global approach to safeguard our children against the potentially
enormous social tensions the projected change could invoke,” another of the
authors, Xu Chi of Nanjing University, said.
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