Human survival in the tropics could rely on keeping global warming below 1.5C

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Image by un-perfekt from Pixabay
Image by un-perfekt from Pixabay

Keeping global warming to 1.5 °C could prevent tropical regions between 20°S and 20°N of the equator from reaching the limit of human survival, according to international research. Humans’ ability to regulate body heat is dependent on the temperature and humidity of the surrounding air. If the ambient temperature reaches the same temperature as human skin, while also being very high humidity such as is in the tropics, the human body is unable to cool itself by sweating. The researchers used numerical model simulations on weather conditions in tropical regions around the equator and found that limiting global warming below 1.5 °C would ensure no region in the tropics would experience extreme heat events that exceed the human survival limit. However, the authors indicate further research will be needed as serious health impacts can still occur well below this limit.

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From: Springer Nature

Climate change: 1.5 °C target keeps the tropics under human adaptability limit 

Limiting global warming to 1.5 °C could prevent tropical regions between 20°S and 20°N of the equator from reaching the limit of human adaptability, suggests a paper published this week in Nature Geoscience.

Humans’ ability to regulate body heat is dependent on the temperature and humidity of the surrounding air.  There exists an upper survival limit, beyond which humans are no longer able to effectively cool themselves. This threshold is reached when the wet-bulb temperature — a measure of air temperature and humidity — passes 35 °C. There is concern that ongoing climate warming could result in extreme heat events that exceed this limit.

Yi Zhang and colleagues analysed numerical model simulations and observations to investigate how wet-bulb temperature extremes are likely to respond to future warming. They find that relatively simple atmospheric dynamics control the maximum wet-bulb temperature in the tropics. Based on their modelling and observations, the authors suggest that wet-bulb temperature extremes in the tropics increase at approximately the same rate as the tropical mean temperature.

These findings suggest that keeping global mean warming below 1.5 °C should ensure that no region in the tropics will experience extreme heat events that exceed the human survival limit. However, the authors indicate further research will be needed as serious health impacts can still occur well below this limit

Journal/
conference:
Nature Geoscience
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Princeton University, USA
Funder: Y.Z. acknowledges support under award NA18OAR4320123 from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, US Department of Commerce (the statements, findings, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the US Department of Commerce). S.F. acknowledges support from National Science Foundation under award AGS-1733818.
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