●Experts mapped current
and projected future 'wet bulb' temperatures globally ●This is made by draping a
water-saturated cloth over the bulb of a thermometer ●High wet-bulb readings
occur once a year but could increase to 250 by 2070 ●Densely populated
northeastern India will be hardest hit, researchers say
Killer heat waves will
become increasingly prevalent in regions across the globe as warming of
the planet continues, climate scientists say.
Large
swaths of the tropics and beyond may see crushing combinations of heat and
humidity in coming decades, according to a new study
|
However
most projections leave out a major factor, humidity, which could worsen things
by greatly magnifying the effects of heat alone.
Now,
a new global study projects that in coming decades the effects of high humidity
will cause suffering for hundreds of millions of people.
This
could leave inhabitants of affected regions unable to work and, in some areas,
threaten to cause a spate of heat related deaths.
The
findings were made by researchers at the Earth institute at Columbia
University in New York.
Potentially
affected regions include large swaths of the already muggy southeastern United
States, the Amazon, western and central Africa, southern areas of the Middle
East and Arabian peninsula as well as northern India and eastern China.
Using
global climate models, experts in mapped current and projected future 'wet
bulb' temperatures, which reflect the combined effects of heat and humidity.
The
measurement is made by draping a water-saturated cloth over the bulb of a
conventional thermometer, it does not correspond directly to air temperature
alone.
The
study found that by the 2070s, high wet-bulb readings that now occur only once
a year could occur between 100 and 250 days of the year in some parts of the
tropics.
Worldwide,
hundreds of millions of people would suffer.
Lead
author Ethan Coffel, a graduate student at Columbia's Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory, said: 'The conditions we're talking about basically never occur
now--people in most places have never experienced them.
'But
they're projected to occur close to the end of the century.'
The
hardest-hit area in terms of human impact, the researchers say, will probably
be densely populated northeastern India.
In
the southeast United States, wet-bulb temperatures now sometimes reach an
already oppressive 29 or 30°C (84 or 86°F)
By
the 2070s or 2080s, such weather could occur 25 to 40 days each year, say the
researchers.
Lab
experiments have shown wet-bulb readings of 32°C (89°F) are the threshold
beyond which many people would have trouble carrying out normal activities
outside.
This
level is rarely reached anywhere today.
But
the study projects that by the 2070s or 2080s the mark could be reached one or
two days a year in the US's southeast, and three to five days in parts of South
America, Africa, India and China.
The
study projects that some parts of the southern Mideast and northern India may
even sometimes hit wet-bulb 35°C (95°F) by late century--equal to the human
skin temperature, and the theoretical limit at which people will die within
hours without artificial cooling.
'Lots
of people would crumble well before you reach wet-bulb temperatures of 32°C, or
anything close,' said coauthor Radley Horton, a climate scientist at
Lamont-Doherty.
'They'd
run into terrible problems.'
Horton
said the results could be 'transformative' for all areas of human
endeavor--'economy, agriculture, military, recreation.'
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