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Global supply chains amplify economic costs of future extreme heat risk

Yida Sun, Shupeng Zhu, Daoping Wang, Jianping Duan, Hui Lü, Hao Yin, Chang Tan, Lingrui Zhang, Mengzhen Zhao, Wenjia Cai, Yong Wang, Yixin Hu, Shu Tao, Dabo Guan

2024Nature195 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

. Here we develop a disaster footprint analytical framework by integrating climate, epidemiological and hybrid input-output and computable general equilibrium global trade models to estimate the midcentury socioeconomic impacts of heat stress. We consider health costs related to heat exposure, the value of heat-induced labour productivity loss and indirect losses due to economic disruptions cascading through supply chains. Here we show that the global annual incremental gross domestic product loss increases exponentially from 0.03 ± 0.01 (SSP 245)-0.05 ± 0.03 (SSP 585) percentage points during 2030-2040 to 0.05 ± 0.01-0.15 ± 0.04 percentage points during 2050-2060. By 2060, the expected global economic losses reach a total of 0.6-4.6% with losses attributed to health loss (37-45%), labour productivity loss (18-37%) and indirect loss (12-43%) under different shared socioeconomic pathways. Small- and medium-sized developing countries suffer disproportionately from higher health loss in South-Central Africa (2.1 to 4.0 times above global average) and labour productivity loss in West Africa and Southeast Asia (2.0-3.3 times above global average). The supply-chain disruption effects are much more widespread with strong hit to those manufacturing-heavy countries such as China and the USA, leading to soaring economic losses of 2.7 ± 0.7% and 1.8 ± 0.5%, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

ProductivitySocioeconomic statusComputable general equilibriumGross domestic productClimate changeNatural resource economicsEconomicsEconomic costEconomic impact analysisGlobal healthAgricultural economicsEnvironmental healthHealth careEconomic growthMedicinePopulationBiologyEcologyMicroeconomicsMacroeconomicsNeoclassical economicsClimate Change and Health ImpactsAir Quality and Health ImpactsEnergy and Environment Impacts
Global supply chains amplify economic costs of future extreme heat risk | Litcius