* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Health effects of climate change: heat related impacts
Climate resilience wikipedia , lookup
Global warming hiatus wikipedia , lookup
Global warming wikipedia , lookup
Climate change in Tuvalu wikipedia , lookup
Media coverage of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Public opinion on global warming wikipedia , lookup
Solar radiation management wikipedia , lookup
Scientific opinion on climate change wikipedia , lookup
General circulation model wikipedia , lookup
Climate sensitivity wikipedia , lookup
Economics of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Attribution of recent climate change wikipedia , lookup
Climate change and agriculture wikipedia , lookup
Surveys of scientists' views on climate change wikipedia , lookup
Climate change in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Years of Living Dangerously wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on human health wikipedia , lookup
Climate change and poverty wikipedia , lookup
IPCC Fourth Assessment Report wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on humans wikipedia , lookup
Instrumental temperature record wikipedia , lookup
Health effects of climate change Heat related impacts Dr Clare Heaviside1,2,3 1Air Pollution and Climate Change Group, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Public Health England, Harwell, Oxfordshire 2School of Geography, Earth and Environment Sciences, University of Birmingham 3London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine [email protected] (Source: CDC website) Climate change often exacerbates an existing health effect Direct and indirect health impacts of Climate Change Temperature changes may modify many of these risks McMichael (2009) Carbon emissions Health impacts Patz (2007) Health Effects of Climate Change in the UK (2012) • 12 HPA authors • 10 external authors from 7 UK research institutions • 34 internal & external reviewers (12 from overseas) • 10 chapters, 240 pages Methods • Extensive literature reviews • New calculations of health impacts • Quantitative estimates (based on UKCP09) where possible • Semi-quantitative or qualitative estimates PHE active in research on CC, input into CCRA, National Adaptation Programme and others… Global annual mean temperature - 2015 Combined land-surface air temperature & sea-surface temperature (Met Office) Hottest years (globally) on record Increasing likelihood of extreme events IPCC 2007 Coumou & Rahmstorf (2012) Summer 2003 – European Heatwave NASA European mortality during the Heatwave of August 2003 UNEP Data from Baden-Wurttemburg, Germany. Schär & Jendritzky (2004) “Highest death toll from Natural Hazards in 50 years for Europe” - United Nations Environment Program (UNEP 2004) max temp • Temperatures reached 38.5oC in Kent in Aug 2003 • >2,000 excess deaths in England • Estimates that between 21 and 38% of the excess deaths were due to the elevated ozone and particulate levels Stedman (2004) 2003 mortality min temp Baseline mortality Daily mortality, London, aged >75yrs - ozone - PM10 Johnson et al (2004) Quantifying the Health Effects of Climate Change • Difficult to quantify health effects relating to Climate Change • More likely to study the effects of weather on health • Example: time series epidemiology of temperature effects • Relate the effects of weather on health to a future climate Temperature-mortality relationship A shift in distribution of temperatures will affect mortality Greater risk on very high temperature days London summer temperature Armstong et al. (2010) Baccini et al. (2008) 1. Projections of temperature related mortality in the UK for the 2020s, 2050s and 2080s 2. Attributing heat related mortality to the Urban Heat Island intensity: a case study for the West Midlands, UK Presentation title - edit in Header and Footer 1. Projections of temperature related mortality in the UK for the 2020s, 2050s and 2080s 2. Attributing heat related mortality to the Urban Heat Island intensity: a case study for the West Midlands, UK Presentation title - edit in Header and Footer Climate change and temperatures in the UK Increase in mean temperatures, heatwaves likely to become more common (UKCIP) By 2040, every other year likely to be as hot as 2003 Jones (2008) Towns and cities are usually a few degrees warmer than rural areas – Urban Heat Island Effect - Higher population exposure to heat in urban areas Projections of temperature related mortality in the UK for the 2000s to 2080s • Temperature-mortality relationships analysed for each UK region, by age group • Mortality estimated for baseline decade (2000s) plus modelled projections • Growth and aging of population included in analysis Presentation title - edit in Header and Footer Hajat et al. (2014) Projections of temperature related mortality in the UK for the 2000s to 2080s • In the UK, cold deaths outnumber heat deaths (for now and future) • The effects of climate change on temperature-related mortality in future are worse for older age groups: • Sharp increases in heat related mortality • Less dramatic decreases in cold related mortality • Public Health implication is that cold will continue to be a problem, particularly with ageing population, however, increasing attention should be given to heat-related impacts. Presentation title - edit in Header and Footer 1. Projections of temperature related mortality in the UK for the 2020s, 2050s and 2080s 2. Attributing heat related mortality to the Urban Heat Island intensity: a case study for the West Midlands, UK Presentation title - edit in Header and Footer The Urban Heat Island (UHI) Why are cities often warmer than the countryside? Urban materials retain heat Buildings stop heat getting radiated to the sky Lack of moisture and vegetation Temperatures in cities can be up to up to 10oC warmer than surrounding countryside Effect larger for cloud free, low wind conditions, and usually more pronounced at night Why is the UHI important? Over half of the world’s population now reside in cities urban Impacts include Health – respiratory, stroke, heat exhaustion, death Increased energy consumption for cooling Increased greenhouse gases and air pollutant emissions rural Changes to water quality (United Nations) Most climate change projections don’t take into account urban surfaces We may be underestimating future temperature increases in cities Birmingham and the West Midlands Birmingham is the UK’s 2nd most populous city (~1 million) The West Midlands is the UK’s 2nd most populous urban conurbation Urbanisation across the West Midlands The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Modelling configuration WRF (Weather Research and Forecasting) ARW (Advanced Research WRF) model 4 nested domains (36 km2, 12 km2, 3 km2 and 1 km2 resolution) Meteorology: ECMWF ERA-interim reanalysis at 1.5o every 6 hours Land surface data: USGS (United States Geological Survey) land use categories BEP (Building Energy Parameterization) scheme •Multilayer surface urban physics scheme (Heaviside et al. 2015) •3 types of urban classes •Urban classes specially adapted for Birmingham and the West Midlands • Simulates the effects of the vertical distribution of heat, momentum and turbulent kinetic energy throughout the urban canopy layer. The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Modelled Simulations ‘Urban’: Model is run using 3 detailed urban land surface categories to best capture the UHI effect using the BEP scheme. ‘Rural’: Model is run by replacing all urban categories with rural (grassland/pasture) categories. A comparison of temperature between the 2 simulations gives an indication of the UHI intensity Urban Temperature: ‘urban’ model simulation Snapshot: 11pm, 5th August 2003 (2 metre temperature) WH – Wolverhampton EB – Edgbaston BC – Birmingham City Centre CH – Coleshill CV – Coventry The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside UHI Intensity: urban – rural experiment Difference in 2m temperature between urban and rural model runs, 11pm, 5th August 2003 WH – Wolverhampton EB – Edgbaston BC – Birmingham City Centre CH – Coleshill CV – Coventry The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Urban – rural experiment: UHI intensity in city centre (Heaviside et al. 2015) Birmingham City Centre: ∆T (urban-rural) = 3.2oC (mean UHI intensity) ∆T (urban-rural) = 5.6oC (max UHI intensity) The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Health Impact Assessment (HIA) methodology Aims: Quantify the effect of the UHI on mortality, and investigate sensitivity of mortality burdens to population weighting of temperature. Estimate the potential health impacts of climate change, by including the UHI intensity as well as the UKCP09 temperature projections. Calculations: • Mortality associated with heat during the 2003 heatwave period • The effect of population weighting of temperature on mortality burden • Mortality associated with the UHI during this period • Mortality associated with Climate Change and UHI for future decades The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Health Impact Assessment results HIA based on modelled ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ WRF simulations Population weighted temperature is 1oC higher than geog mean temperature The UHI contributed around half (52%) of the total heat related mortality in the West Midlands during the heatwave of 2003. Heaviside et al. (2016) MORTALITY Temperature metric ‘Urban’ pop weighted ‘Urban’ geog mean ‘Rural’ ‘Current’ climate 2003 heatwave Future Climate Projections (without pop changes) 2020s 2050s 2080s 90 127 (112) 184 (143) 256 (174) 73 105 (92) 159 (124) 229 (155) 43 73 (64) 116 (90) 180 (122) Health Impact Assessment results HIA based on modelled ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ WRF simulations, plus climate change projections Population weighted temperature is 1oC higher than geog mean temperature The UHI contributed around half (52%) of the total heat related mortality in the West Midlands during the heatwave of 2003. Heaviside et al. (2016) MORTALITY Temperature metric ‘Urban’ pop weighted ‘Urban’ geog mean ‘Rural’ ‘Current’ climate 2003 heatwave Future Climate Projections (without pop growth) 2020s 2050s 2080s 90 138 (125) 200 (159) 278 (192) 73 114 (104) 173 (138) 248 (172) 43 79 (72) 125 (101) 195 (135) HIA results – climate change Estimated mortality based on HIA for 2003 heatwave, and for potentially similar heatwave events projected for 3 future decades, (medium emissions, with population growth). Summary of HIA results • According to simulations, the effect of urbanisation in the West Midlands was on average ~3oC, with max ∆T of 7oC during the 2003 heatwave (daily mean T) • Population weighting of temperature data resulted in +1oC for the region • The 1st-10th August 2003 heatwave was associated with 90 additional deaths in region • Around half (47) of these were associated with the UHI intensity • Climate projections suggest a similar heatwave in 2080 could result in ~280 deaths • Calculations include population growth but assumes no adaptation to heat in future Implications for HIA methodology: A HIA based on geographic mean temperature underestimated mortality by 20% A HIA without urban surfaces (no UHI) underestimated mortality by 52% To account for all future effects: include population weighting and UHI as well as climate and population projections The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Thank you [email protected] The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Bibliography 1/2 Armstrong, B.G., Chalabi, Z., Fenn, B., Hajat, S., Kovats, S., Milojevic, A. and Wilkinson, P. (2010) Association of mortality with high temperatures in a temperate climate: England and Wales. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. Baccini, M., Biggeri, A., Accetta, G., Kosatsky, T., Katsouyanni, K., Analitis, A., Anderson, H.R., Bisanti, L., D'Iippoliti, D., Danova, J., Forsberg, B., Medina, S., Paldy, A., Rabczenko, D., Schindler, C. and Michelozzi, P. (2008) Heat effects on mortality in 15 European cities. Epidemiology 19(5), 711-719. Coumou and Rahmstorf (2012) A decade of weather extremes. Nature Climate Change 2, 491–496 Hajat, S., Vardoulakis, S., Heaviside, C. and Eggen, B. (2014) Climate change effects on human health: projections of temperature-related mortality for the UK during the 2020s, 2050s, and 2080s. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 68 (7), 641-648. Heaviside C., Cai, X.-M., Vardoulakis, S. (2015). The effects of horizontal advection on the Urban Heat Island in Birmingham and the West Midlands, UK during a heatwave. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society. 141, 1429–1441. Heaviside C., Vardoulakis, S., Cai, X.-M.(2016) The contribution of the Urban Heat Island to heat related mortality during the 2003 heatwave and for projected future climate in the West Midlands, UK. Journal of Environmental Health. In press IPCC (2007). Summary for Policymakers. In: Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA.,. The health impacts of the Urban Heat Island Clare Heaviside Bibliography 2/2 Johnson, H., Kovats, R.S., McGregor, G., Stedman, J., Gibbs, M., Walton, H., Cook, L. and Black, E. (2005) The impact of the 2003 heat wave on mortality and hospital admissions in England. Health statistics quarterly / Office for National Statistics(25), 6-11. Jones, G.S., Stott, P.A. and Christidis, N. (2008) Human contribution to rapidly increasing frequency of very warm Northern Hemisphere summers. Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres 113(2). McMichael, A. and Wilcox, B. (2009) Climate Change, Human Health, and Integrative Research: A Transformative Imperative. EcoHealth 6(2), 163-164. Patz, J.A., Gibbs, H.K., Foley, J.A., Rogers, J.V. and Smith, K.R. (2007) Climate change and global health: Quantifying a growing ethical crisis. EcoHealth 4(4), 397-405. Schär, C., Vidale, P.L., Lüthi, D., Frei, C., Häberli, C., Liniger, M.A. and Appenzeller, C. (2004) The role of increasing temperature variability in European summer heatwaves. Nature 427(6972), 332-336. Stedman, J.R. (2004) The predicted number of air pollution related deaths in the UK during the August 2003 heatwave. Atmospheric Environment 38(8), 1087-1090. UNEP (2004) United Nations Environment Program. Impacts of Summer 2003 Heat Wave in Europe, Environmental Alert Bulletin. Vardoulakis, S. and Heaviside, C. [eds.] (2012) Health Effects of Climate Change in the UK 2012 – Current evidence, public health recommendations and research gaps. Health Protection Agency, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, UK. ISBN:978-0-85951-723-2. Temperature related mortality in future Heat deaths Sharp increases in heat related mortality in future decades, especially for older age groups Temperature related mortality in future Cold deaths Decreases in cold related mortality in future decades, although reductions not as sharp as increase in heat related mortality See also Hajat et al. (2014)