Aurora Monge

Aurora Monge

Aurora Monge
Position

Senior lecturer at the School of Architecture and member of the SAVIArquitectura research group (Environmental Sustainability, Housing, Industrialisation and Architecture) at the University of Navarra

A study estimates that extreme heat-related physical inactivity could cause more than half a million premature deaths annually by 2050

Physical inactivity driven by rising temperatures due to climate change could result in between 0.47 and 0.70 million additional premature deaths each year by 2050, according to projections from a new study published in The Lancet Global Health. The study analysed data on the relationship between temperature and physical inactivity across 156 countries between 2000 and 2022. Low- and middle-income countries, where access to air conditioning, the availability of shaded public infrastructure, and discretionary leisure time are limited, were the most affected. Spain is among the European countries expected to be most impacted.

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Children and heat: how rising temperatures affect them and how to adapt their environment to climate change

Children will suffer more from the climate crisis than their grandparents. Fifty-two per cent of people born in 2020 will experience unprecedented heat waves throughout their lives, compared to 16 per cent of those born in 1960. This was calculated by a study published in Nature last month, assuming that temperatures rise 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels. In this article, we analyse the profile of children who already suffer from heat in our country and explain how to adapt their environments to extreme temperatures. 

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