World must prepare for more intense heatwaves: UN

TOPSHOT – Wild fires engulf the woods near the village of Pournari, in the area of Magoula, some 25km southwest of the Greek capital Athens on July 18, 2023. Europe braced for new high temperatures on July 18, 2023, under a relentless heatwave and wildfires that have scorched swathes of the Northern Hemisphere, forcing the evacuation of 1,200 children close to a Greek seaside resort. Health authorities have sounded alarms from North America to Europe and Asia, urging people to stay hydrated and shelter from the burning sun, in a stark reminder of the effects of global warming. (Photo by Spyros BAKALIS / AFP)

GENEVA, July 18, 2023 (AFP) – The world should get ready to face increasingly intense heatwaves, the United Nations warned on Tuesday, as countries across the Northern Hemisphere reeled from soaring temperatures.

Health authorities have sounded the alarm from North America to Europe and Asia, urging people to stay hydrated and shelter from the burning sun, in a stark reminder of the effects of global warming.

“These events will continue to grow in intensity, and the world needs to prepare for more intense heatwaves,” John Nairn, a senior extreme heat advisor at the UN’s World Meteorological Organization (WMO), told reporters.

Heatwaves are amongst the deadliest natural hazards, with hundreds of thousands of people dying from preventable heat-related causes each year.

Nairn warned the health risk was growing rapidly, amid burgeoning urbanisation, higher temperature extremes and ageing populations.

In the short term, he said the recently-declared El Nino — a warming climate pattern that occurs every two to seven years — “is only expected to amplify the occurrence and intensity of extreme heat events”.

But regardless of El Nino, the trend is clear, Nairn said, pointing out that the number of simultaneous heatwaves in the Northern Hemisphere had swelled six-fold since the 1980s.

“This trend shows no signs of decreasing,” he said, warning of heatwaves’ “quite serious impacts on human health and livelihoods”.

Temperature forecasts for Europe and the Mediterranean at 2 m above the surface, according to the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), data as of July 18, 2023, 0000 GMT. (Photo by Anibal MAIZ CACERES and Guillermo RIVAS PACHECO / AFP)


– ‘Particularly dangerous’ –

Europe, the world’s fastest-warming continent, was bracing for the peak of the current heatwave to hit Italy’s Sicily and Sardinia islands, amid forecasts of a high of 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit).

The WMO said it was monitoring to see if the current European temperature record of 48.8C recorded on Sicily in 2021 might be smashed.

Even more concerning than maximum day temperatures was the high overnight minimum temperatures, Nairn said.

“Repeated high night-time temperatures are particularly dangerous for human health, because the body is unable to recover from sustained heat,” he said.

“This leads to increased cases of heart attacks and death.”

There is currently no clear definition of what constitutes a heatwave, but the WMO said it was in the process of developing an overarching categorisation of heatwave intensity, in a bid to “standardise impact forecasts and warnings worldwide”.

Experts say human-induced climate change is exacerbating heatwaves, bringing higher temperatures and also slowing down and “parking” hot weather systems over locations for longer periods of time.

Asked what should be done to counter this, Nairn said the message was “simple”: “Stop carbon fuels; just electrify everything”.

Related Post

This website uses cookies.