City
Epaper

Billion people could face deadly levels of heat stress with global warming at 2C: Report

By ANI | Updated: November 9, 2021 18:30 IST

One billion people across the world could be affected by extreme heat stress - a potentially fatal combination of heat and humidity - if global temperature reaches the 2 degrees Celsius threshold, a new scientific report released on Tuesday by the UK Meteorological Office warned.

Open in App

One billion people across the world could be affected by extreme heat stress - a potentially fatal combination of heat and humidity - if global temperature reaches the 2 degrees Celsius threshold, a new scientific report released on Tuesday by the UK Meteorological Office warned.

"At the new temperature - according to new figures and a map from the Met Office - the number of people living in areas affected by extreme heat stress rises from 68 million today to around one billion," the study said, adding that the 4.0°C rise could see nearly half of the world's population living in areas potentially affected.

The experts, who based their findings on data from an international team led by the University of Exeter, said that tropical countries like Brazil and Ethiopia will be the worst affected.

"This new combined analysis shows the urgency of limiting global warming to well below 2.0 °C. The higher the level of warming, the more severe and widespread the risks to people's lives, but it is still possible to avoid these higher risks if we act now," project leader and climate scientist Richard Betts of the Meteorological Office and the University of Exeter was quoted as saying.

Human heat stress risk depends on both temperature and humidity, and is indicated using the wet bulb temperature, which was limited at 32 degrees by the scientists conducting the research.

"At this level, vulnerable members of the population, and those with physical, outdoor jobs are at greater risk of adverse health effects," they warned.

The report from the UK Meteorological Office comes as the UN Conference on Climate Change (COP26) running in Glasgow, Scotland, from October 31 till November 12 is expected to reach meaningful commitments to cut greenhouse emissions, achieve carbon neutrality and limit global warming to 1.5 degrees. (ANI/Sputnik)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Met OfficeRichard bettsBrazilGlasgowMet OfficeMeteorological officeGeneral office of the civil aviation departmentUk met office hadley centreCentral meteorological department
Open in App

Related Stories

FootballARG 4-1 BRA, FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier: Messi-Less Argentina Thrash Brazil

InternationalWoman Tries to Kill Co-Worker by Poisoning Water Over Promotion Dispute in Brazil

MumbaiBrazilian Woman Arrested at Mumbai Airport for Smuggling Cocaine Worth Rs 11 Crore Inside Her Stomach

InternationalBrazil Plane Crash: Two Killed, Several Injured as Aircraft Crashes into Busy Street in São Paulo (VIDEO)

FootballMarcelo Retires at 36: Cristiano Ronaldo Sends Heartfelt Message to Former Real Madrid Teammate

International Realted Stories

InternationalTibetans-in-exile mark 36th birthday of Panchen Lama, pay tribute to Pahalgam terror attack victims

InternationalPakistan: Concerns raised over forced disappearance of student in Karachi

InternationalPolice aircraft crashes in Thailand, killing six

InternationalChinese Consul General attends Chinese Culture Day in Kolkata, condemns Pahalgam attack

InternationalTibetans in exile commemorate 36th birthday of Panchen Lama, appeal to China for his release