A new study indicates that extreme temperatures could lead to 2.3 million deaths in Europe by 2100 due to insufficient ...
Extreme heat could kill as many as 2.3 million people in Europe unless countries get better at cutting emissions.
A recent study from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine has painted a grim picture for Europe given current climate projections. By the end of the century, extreme heat could lead ...
Still, in Europe, deaths due to cold temperatures currently outnumber those caused by heat by ten to one. This is on track to change as global temperatures increase: cold-related deaths are ...
Extreme temperatures — mostly heat — are projected to kill as many as 2.3 million people in Europe by the end of the century unless countries get better at reducing carbon pollution and ...
Climate change will likely cause a sharp increase in deaths from extreme heat, substantially outweighing any decrease in cold-related deaths across Europe. A modelling study was led by researchers ...
Climate change will likely result in a significant rise in deaths from heat across Europe, substantially surpassing any decrease in cold-related deaths. This trend persists across climate change ...
Urgent climate action is critical to mitigate this rising health crisis. Climate change will likely result in a significant rise in deaths from heat across Europe, substantially surpassing any ...
A modelling study, led by researchers from the Environment & Health Modelling (EHM) Lab at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), suggests that climate change will likely result in ...