Avoiding population exposure to heat-related extremes: demographic change vs climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Bryan Jones
Claudia Tebaldi
Brian C. O’Neill
Keith Oleson
Jing Gao
机构
[1] Baruch College,
[2] CUNY Institute for Demographic Research,undefined
[3] National Center for Atmospheric Research,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2018年 / 146卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Heat waves are among the most dangerous climate-related hazards, and they are projected to increase in frequency and intensity over the coming century. Exposure to heat waves is a function of the spatial distribution of physical events and the corresponding population distribution, and future exposure will be impacted by changes in both distributions. Here, we project future exposure using ensembles of climate projections that account for the urban heat island effect, for two alternative emission scenarios (RCP4.5/RCP8.5) and two alternative population and urbanization (SSP3/SSP5) outcomes. We characterize exposure at the global, regional, and grid-cell level; estimate the exposure that would be avoided by mitigating future levels of climate change (to RCP4.5); and quantify the dependence of exposure on population outcomes. We find that climate change is a stronger determinant of exposure than demographic change in these scenarios, with a global reduction in exposure of over 50% under a lower emissions pathway, while a slower population growth pathway leads to roughly 30% less exposure. Exposure reduction varies at the regional level, but in almost all cases, the RCP remains more influential than the SSP. Uncertainty in outcomes is dominated by inter-annual variability in heat extremes (relative to variability across initial condition ensemble members). For some regions, this variability is large enough that a reduction in annual exposure is not guaranteed in each individual year by following the lower forcing pathway. Finally, we find that explicitly considering the urban heat island effect and separate urban and rural heat extremes and populations can substantially influence results, generally increasing projected exposure.
引用
收藏
页码:423 / 437
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Avoiding population exposure to heat-related extremes: demographic change vs climate change
    Jones, Bryan
    Tebaldi, Claudia
    O'Neill, Brian C.
    Oleson, Keith
    Gao, Jing
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2018, 146 (3-4) : 423 - 437
  • [2] High resolution climate change observations and projections for the evaluation of heat-related extremes
    Williams, Emily
    Funk, Chris
    Peterson, Pete
    Tuholske, Cascade
    SCIENTIFIC DATA, 2024, 11 (01)
  • [3] Heat-Related Health Impacts under Scenarios of Climate and Population Change
    Morefield, Philip E.
    Fann, Neal
    Grambsch, Anne
    Raich, William
    Weaver, Christopher P.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2018, 15 (11)
  • [4] A case study of avoiding the heat-related mortality impacts of climate change under mitigation scenarios
    Gosling, Simon N.
    Lowe, Jason A.
    EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE 2010: GLOBAL CHANGE, CLIMATE AND PEOPLE, 2011, 6 : 104 - 111
  • [5] Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Cold- Vs. Heat-Related Mortality
    Ebi, K. L.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2008, 19 (06) : S57 - S57
  • [6] The contribution of demographic changes to future heat-related health burdens under climate change scenarios
    Cole, Rebecca
    Hajat, Shakoor
    Murage, Peninah
    Heaviside, Clare
    Macintyre, Helen
    Davies, Michael
    Wilkinson, Paul
    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2023, 173
  • [7] Projections of heat-related excess mortality in China due to climate change, population and aging
    Zhao Liu
    Si Gao
    Wenjia Cai
    Zongyi Li
    Can Wang
    Xing Chen
    Zhiyuan Ma
    Zijian Zhao
    Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering, 2023, 17
  • [8] Projections of heat-related excess mortality in China due to climate change, population and aging
    Liu, Zhao
    Gao, Si
    Cai, Wenjia
    Li, Zongyi
    Wang, Can
    Chen, Xing
    Ma, Zhiyuan
    Zhao, Zijian
    FRONTIERS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING, 2023, 17 (11)
  • [9] Projections of heat-related excess mortality in China due to climate change,population and aging
    Zhao Liu
    Si Gao
    Wenjia Cai
    Zongyi Li
    Can Wang
    Xing Chen
    Zhiyuan Ma
    Zijian Zhao
    Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering, 2023, 17 (11) : 22 - 32
  • [10] Global socioeconomic exposure of heat extremes under climate change
    Chen, Jie
    Liu, Yujie
    Pan, Tao
    Ciais, Philippe
    Ma, Ting
    Liu, Yanhua
    Yamazaki, Dai
    Ge, Quansheng
    Penuelas, Josep
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2020, 277