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Probabilistic projections of increased heat stress driven by climate change

Lucas R. Vargas Zeppetello, Adrian E. Raftery, David S. Battisti

2022Communications Earth & Environment143 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Heat Index is a metric that quantifies heat exposure in human beings. Here, using probabilistic emission projections, we show that changes in the Heat Index driven by anthropogenic CO 2 emissions will increase global exposure to dangerous environments in the coming decades. Even if the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to 2 °C is met, the exposure to dangerous Heat Index levels will likely increase by 50–100% across much of the tropics and increase by a factor of 3–10 in many regions throughout the midlatitudes. Without emissions reductions more aggressive than those considered possible by our statistical projection, it is likely that by 2100, many people living in tropical regions will be exposed to dangerously high Heat Index values during most days of each typical year, and that the kinds of deadly heat waves that have been rarities in the midlatitudes will become annual occurrences.

Topics & Concepts

Climate changeHeat stressProbabilistic logicEnvironmental scienceStress (linguistics)ClimatologyAtmospheric sciencesMathematicsStatisticsGeologyPhilosophyLinguisticsOceanographyClimate Change and Health ImpactsClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
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