Extreme Heat is Making Life Increasingly UNLIVABLE
Days of extreme heat making ordinary activities too dangerous have doubled globally over the last 75 years, research published this week shows. Seniors experience roughly a month each year when heat prevents routine tasks, with over a third of humanity now living in severely heat-affected regions. This is the first study documenting how extreme heat restricts everyday life, not just survival, with young adults losing 50 hours yearly.
The number of days where extreme heat makes it too dangerously hot to walk the dog, sweep the porch and engage in other ordinary pursuits has doubled around the world over the last 75 years, according to new research. Scientists determined that on average, those 65 and older experience a month a year when heat prevents them from routine activities. Parts of Asia, Africa, Australia and North America are becoming unlivable for senior citizens, the researchers said. Younger adults also are losing time as climate-driven heat restricts their lives for 50 hours a year.
Overall, more than a third of the global population resides in regions where heat severely affects daily life, according to the peer-reviewed paper published Tuesday in the journal Environmental Research: Health. Although previous research has shown the effect of extreme heat on human health, authors of the new study said it’s the first to document the consequences of rising temperatures on everyday life. “Extreme heat isn’t just affecting our ability to survive or work physically demanding jobs, but also just to do simple, light, daily tasks,” said Luke Parsons, a climate scientist at the environmental nonprofit the Nature Conservancy and lead author of the paper.
The researchers analyzed heat and humidity records from 1950 to 2024. They used the United Nations’ Human Development Index, which measures each country’s health and living standards, as a proxy for vulnerability to rising temperatures. The scientists, who developed a physiological model of heat effects on different age groups, determined when it becomes too hot for people to undertake tasks when exposed to outdoor temperatures in the shade. In Qatar, for instance, heat now makes it risky for older adults to engage in routine activities for a third of the year. Even 18- to 40-year-olds in that country must curb daily tasks for more than 800 hours a year or 10% of their time.
Senior citizens in the U.S. have 270 fewer hours they can devote to normal activities due to the risks of overheating. In the southern U.S., “we’re looking at many hundreds of hours of livability limitations for older adults every year,” Parsons said. Those areas, along with Europe, southern South America, southern Australia and parts of Asia and Africa, have seen the largest increases in restrictions on daily life since 1995, according to the paper. Study co-author Jennifer Vanos, an associate professor at Arizona State University who studies urban extreme heat, said the research shows that overheating can pose a threat to people such as restaurant workers who do a lot of low-exertion walking on the job. “Even though we don’t see that as high-intensity physical activity, it could turn into a very dangerous situation because of their exposure to heat over time,” she said.
Although citizens of wealthy nations such as Qatar and the United Arab Emirates can seek refuge in air-conditioned homes, Parsons noted those countries depend on large populations of migrant laborers working in construction and other outdoor jobs. Global temperatures hit a record high in 2024, a year in which warming exceeded 1.5 degrees Celsius on an annual basis for the first time. “This study provides us with a really grim, unfortunate glimpse into what potentially a 1½-degree-warmer world looks like,” Parsons said.
Yawn... not buying it. What else have they got to sell?
Wasn't it terrible when the Arctic and Antarctic melted? (Oh wait, they didn't.)
This is brave, right when the northern hemisphere is trying to shake off one of the coldest winters in recent history. It actually makes me glad to see them double down on dying psyops, they really have nothing else.
I’m 75. The hotter it gets, the better I like it. Didn’t lose any time last year, certainly not 270 hours! In fact, I got the same number of hours as everybody else: 8760.
The statisticians who calculate all that crap are fake and gay anyway … and as “lost” as the people who pay for fiction and call it facts!
Here in Michigan, we have had what the Old Farmer's Almanac calls an old fashion winter with cold temperatures and quite a bit of snow. The temperatures are so up and down. It reminds me of the saying, well, it's Michigan, so wait a couple days and things change. When you live in the areas where it gets extremely hot, you learn to deal with it. We have air conditioned cars, air conditioned homes, and places of work. And boy, we are spoiled. Here people strip down to tank tops and shorts when it's in the 60s. It used to be you could open your windows for a nice breeze, but that's really not safe any more in the cities I don't think it's getting warmer. I think it's how we deal with the heat.
Lame assed argument based on data that is so easily manipulated and manipulatable that anyone claiming the world is at peril is a fucking ignoramus of the lowest caliber.
Air conditioning, ceiling fans, and refrigeration has helped to make humanity the weakest it's ever been.
Now do the same write up for too cold. Then just do climate change.
Imagine going through a southern summer in a corset and miles of silk skirts and no air conditioning. The women survived. Men wore wool in the same weather and fought battles in it. This is pretty much just plain stupid.
Not sure about all of that bullshit. But, Nebraska did not have a winter. Well, okay, two weeks. Barley any snow. Entire state is now in drought. Something is going on with climate shifts globally. Sun cycle? Magnetic pole reversal? Prepare for the ice age!!
Nebraska just got snow and a low of 17
It was one night of cold last night where I live. Less than a half inch. It used to be highs in the 30's from mid November to early March. This year, February (which is typically the coldest and snowiest we had temps in the low 70's. It was very uncanny. This has been the trend over the past 10 years. Yes, we get cold snaps and a storm or two each winter... but it used to be the norm for four months. This year... nothing. I felt like I was in Oklahoma.
Yet all the old folks move to the sunshine states.
I lose time to cold, don't think I've ever lost time to heat.
And remember if it's too hot, the air is bad and stuff. And if it's too cold, the air is too bad and stuff but for different reasons. Trust us bro.
I think he should wait till August to post this shit. And if you move the thermometers away from the airports, you would probably lose that 1 1/2 degrees.
My AC works great. I work inside when it’s hot outside.
Why spread propaganda? I expected analysis. No rebuttal, just a posting of said propaganda.
... weird ...
So... What happened to "survival of the fittest?"
Losing hours because people are too poisoned by medicine to function in normal temperatures.