'Extreme Heat Belt' Will Impact Over 100 Million Americans By 2053: Report
An area of intensely warm weather -- a
so-called "extreme heat belt" -- with at least one day per year in
which the heat index hits 125 Fahrenheit (52C), is expected to cover a US
region home to more than 100 million people by the year 2053, according to a
new study.
The research, carried out by nonprofit First Street Foundation,
used a peer-reviewed model built with public and third-party data to estimate
heat risk at what they called a "hyper-local" scale of 30 square
meters.
First
Street Foundation's mission is to make climate risk modeling accessible to the
public, government and industry representatives, such as real estate investors
and insurers.
A
key finding from the study was that heat exceeding the threshold of the
National Weather Service's highest category -- called "Extreme
Danger," or above 125F -- was expected to impact 8.1 million people in
2023 and grow to 107 million people in 2053, a 13-fold increase.
Heat
index, also known as the apparent temperature, is what the outside temperature
really feels like to the human body when relative humidity is combined with air
temperature.
To
create their model, the research team examined satellite-derived land surface
temperatures and air temperatures between 2014 and 2020, to help understand the
exact relationship between the two measurements.
This
information was further studied by factoring in elevation, how water is
absorbed in the area, the distance to surface water and the distance to a
coast.
The
model was then scaled to future climate conditions, using a "middle of the
road" scenario envisaged by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
in which carbon dioxide levels start falling by mid-century, but do not reach
net zero by 2100.
Beyond
"Extreme Danger" days, areas across the whole country are expected to
experience hotter temperatures, with varying degrees of resilience.
"These
increases in local temperatures result in significant implications for
communities that are not acclimated to warmer weather relative to their normal
climate," the report said.
For
example, a 10 percent temperature increase in the northeastern state of Maine
may be as dangerous as a 10 percent increase in the southwestern state of
Texas, despite the higher absolute temperatures seen in Texas.
The
biggest predicted shift in local temperature occurred in Miami-Dade County,
Florida, which currently sees seven days per year at its hottest temperature of
103 Fahrenheit. By 2053, that number is expected to increase to 34 days at 103
degrees.
No comments: