Close Menu
  • Chattogram
  • Business
  • National
  • International
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Health & Fitness
    • Port & Shipping
    • Environment
    • Opinion

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Samsung’s The Grand Invite: Winners get motorbikes

July 12, 2025

Interim govt welcomes WHO’s action placing Saima Wazed on leave

July 12, 2025

Mob violence won’t be tolerated: RAB DG

July 12, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, July 13 , 2025

Bangla | ePaper

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
People's ViewPeople's View
Demo
  • Chattogram
  • Business
  • National
  • International
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Health & Fitness
    • Port & Shipping
    • Environment
    • Opinion
People's ViewPeople's View
Home»Environment»‘Thousands of unreported deaths in poor countries’ due to heat inequality
Environment

‘Thousands of unreported deaths in poor countries’ due to heat inequality

Poor people and outdoor workers are dying around the world: Friederike Otto, of World Weather Attribution
August 17, 2024No CommentsSamshad SattarBy PV Online Desk
Refugees, cycle couriers, construction workers and street cleaners are among those who suffer with extreme heat. Courtesy: The Guardian
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Jonathan Watts and Isabella Kaminski
Fri 16 Aug 2024 13.00 BST

Last modified on Sat 17 Aug 2024 05.08 BST

Heat inequality is causing thousands of unreported deaths in poor countries and communities across the world, a leading analyst of climate impacts has warned, following global temperature records that may not have been seen in 120,000 years.

Sweltering conditions act as a stealthy killer that preys on the most economically fragile, said Friederike Otto, co-founder of World Weather Attribution, in an appeal for the media and authorities to pay more attention to the dangers.

“Heatwaves are the deadliest type of extreme weather but they don’t leave a trail of destruction or striking images of devastation. They kill poor, lonely people in rich countries, and poor people working outdoors in developing countries,” said Otto, who is also a senior lecturer in climate science at the Grantham Institute of Imperial College London. “In the last 13 months, there will be thousands and thousands of stories of poor people dying in heat that will never be told.”

The advice comes amid growing concern about the hidden toll of heat inequality. Last month, the UN secretary general announced a call to action on extreme heat, with a focus on care for the vulnerable and protection of exposed workers.

“Extreme heat is increasingly tearing through economies, widening inequalities, undermining the sustainable development goals and killing people. It is estimated to kill almost half a million people a year; that’s about 30 times more than tropical cyclones,” António Guterres pointed out.

This followed the world’s three hottest days on record on 21, 22 and 23 July. As well as passing the previous peak in datasets going back to 1940, climatologists said it was probably also the highest temperature on Earth in about 120,000 years, based on evidence from tree rings and ice cores. It did not come not without warning. Up to July, the Earth had set 13 consecutive monthly temperature records, primarily because of human burning of forests, gas, oil and coal.

A precise death toll from these searing extremes may never be calculated but it is certain that lower income groups will have been worst affected because heat inequality is self-reinforcing. While the rich glide from air-conditioned homes in air-conditioned cars to air-conditioned offices, restaurants and shopping malls, the heat from these artificially cooled environments is sent on to the street outside, where less advantaged workers sweat as couriers, construction workers or road cleaners.

Equality campaigners say the vulnerability gap continues at home. “Deaths from heat are shaped by inequality – a heatwave is far more deadly for someone living in a tin shack than it is for someone in an air-conditioned house,” said Alex Maitland, inequality policy adviser at Oxfam International.

“Over the coming decades, deaths from heat stress are forecast to rise dramatically in low-income countries. The cruel irony is that people who die from heat are the least responsible for soaring temperatures. The richest 1% emit more than two-thirds of the world combined, with their carbon emissions in 2019 alone enough to cause the heat-related deaths of 1.3 million people.”

The inequality of suffering extends to worship and migration. More than 80% of the 1,300 Hajj pilgrims who died of heat-related causes in June were unauthorised pilgrims, who could not afford air-conditioned accommodation and transport and had no access to cooling tents and water stations. Many were staying on the streets in temperatures that approached 50C.

Studies by World Weather Attribution found the heatwave was made up to 2.5C hotter by climate change. “This additional heat would have been the difference between life and death for many of these people,” Otto said.

Asylum seekers, who are often escaping heat and drought, are also at a much higher risk. In June, dozens of Sudanese migrants died from the scorching heat at an illegal border crossing into Egypt. The victims included entire families, said aid groups. Later the same month, the bodies of three Mexican migrants were found in the Sonoran desert in Arizona near the US border as a a brutal heatwave gripped the region. The El Paso Border Patrol sector, which includes parts of Texas and New Mexico, said migrant deaths more than doubled from 2022 to 2023 as a result of the temperature rise.

Last year, the charred bodies of 18 Syrian asylum seekers were found after a wildfire in the Dadia region of north-eastern Greece.

In less developed countries, the authorities often do not have the means to collect data or investigate individual deaths. This is particularly true in conflict regions, such as Afghanistan, Mali, Sudan, Somalia and Central African Republic.

An increasing number of countries are taking action to protect workers from heat by implementing new laws. In Armenia, for example, special breaks should be granted when temperatures go above 40C.

Some countries set different limits depending on how intensive the work is. In Belgium, the limits range between 29C for light physical work and 18C for very heavy work. In Hungary, by comparison, thresholds vary from 27C to 31C. Cyprus, meanwhile, distinguishes between workers who are “acclimatised” to the heat and those who are not; safe working limits for the latter are 2.5C lower.

Dr Halshka Graczyk, a technical specialist on occupational safety and health at the International Labour Organization, said there was evidence of clear productivity loss for every degree rise in temperature.

Although temperature limits at work were increasingly common, they tended to be set in an ad hoc way, she said. “There is no algorithm, there is no way to say your baseline temperature in your country is X and therefore your population is acclimatised to around this temperature.” Nor was there enough monitoring and evaluation to know if the set limits helped protect human health and improve productivity.

Enforcement of these laws is also a continuing tussle. Qatar is one of several Gulf countries that has summertime bans on outdoor work during the hottest times of the day, prohibiting it from 1 June to 15 September between 10am and 3.30pm. However, an investigation by the Independent found hundreds of breaches last year, mostly in the construction industry.

Enforcing indoor limits, such as in factories, could be even harder, given that these workplaces are less visible.

In Indonesia, a lawsuit brought by a group of young people claims, among other things, that insufficient government action on climate crisis is breaching their right to work and earn a decent living. In Bangladesh, a court ordered a nationwide shutdown of schools in April because of a severe heatwave.

Otto urged great global attention on this dimly understood crisis. “We just don’t know how many people are being killed by extreme heat in poor countries. But due to their much higher exposure, there’s no reason to think it’d be a smaller proportion than in rich countries, where we know of the thousands dying,” she said. There is a huge need to report on these dangers, again and again.”

Rather than illustrating heat reports with happy people on the beach, she said the media needed to consider often-hidden and preventable tragedies both in faraway parts of the world and in marginalised communities in their own countries. “To tackle change, we need to create a more equal world, but we also need to tackle inequality at home.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
PV Online Desk

Related Posts

CA opens Environment Fair, Tree Fair

June 25, 2025

Rain in Bangladesh
Rain expected across Bangladesh for the next few days

June 18, 2025

Weather during Eid: Rain to weaken, heat to intensify

June 3, 2025
Latest News

Sanmilito Peshajibi Parisad honors Osman Gani Mansur

November 9, 2024

Eid gifts and cash support to child cancer patients

March 16, 2025

BD_Korea signed loan agreement for Kalurghat Bridge

June 28, 2024

Container of cigarettes seized in Chattogram

June 28, 2024

3 killed in Chattogram market fire

June 28, 2024

No accident occurred due to railway signal system error: Minister

June 27, 2024

CCC announces TK 1981.52 crore budget

June 27, 2024

BNP announces rally demanding unconditional release of Khaleda

June 26, 2024

Samsung’s The Grand Invite: Winners get motorbikes

July 12, 2025

Afghanistan qualify for first World Cup semi-final, Australia out

June 25, 2024

94 Sirajuddowla Road, Chattagram, Bangladesh
Email Us:viewpeoples@gmail.com
Contact: 02333357888

Editor & Publisher

Osman Gani Mansur

  • National
  • Chattogram
  • International
  • Business
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2025 People View. Any unauthorized use or reproduction of The People's View content for commercial purposes is strictly prohibited and constitutes copyright infringement liable to legal action. | Designed & Developed by Web Solution IT Ltd.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.