Days with both extreme heat and extreme air pollution are becoming more common – which can’t be a good thing for global health

By Yangyang Xu & Xiaohui Xu
The big idea
Days of extreme high heat and extreme air pollution are both increasing worldwide. Last November, New Delhi experienced a week of the worst air pollution in human history. and . Not long before that, Western Europe was slammed with two record-breaking heatwaves that .
Days of extreme heat and extreme pollution do not often overlap, but our two teams at Texas A&M wanted to see if the and explore what the .
To test this, we used a computer model to look at the . The model incorporated trends in greenhouse gas and air pollution emissions from industrial and residential sources, population growth, migration trends and even how air pollution is affected by weather, terrain and nearby oceans.
We predict that the frequency of days with both extreme heat and pollution – and the number of people that will be affected by those days – could massively increase by 2050.
We focused on South Asia because it’s already a climate change hot spot and its population is projected to increase from . Under a and with little reduction in CO2 and other pollutants, days with both extreme heat and extreme pollution would , resulting in roughly 78 days a year with those double whammy conditions.
Additionally, the amount of land that would experience this double threat for 60 days or more a year would increase tenfold from 2000 to 2050 – from 2% to more than 25% of all of South Asia. This will also lead to more than 52% of the population being exposed to more than 60 days of this double hazard.
Why it matters
Both extreme heat and air pollution have severe negative effects on the human body.
Extreme heat increases the likelihood of , but can also worsen . As part of an effort to better understand how extreme heat affects mortality rates, we are currently studying the .
Air pollution is known to lead to , , and other severe health effects.
So what happens when a person experiences both at the same time?
Scientists know that when a person experiences air pollution in addition to another simultaneous stressor, they become more susceptible to both. This has been shown for combinations such as , as well as .
It is hard to say exactly what effect a prolonged exposure to the double threats of heat and air pollution would have on human health as there have only been a few cases studies looking at the . The results, though sparse, when the two conditions co-occur.
What still isn’t known
The full health effects from a combination of extreme heat and extreme pollution are largely unknown, especially in many developing nations where studies haven’t been done and the extremes are expected to get more severe. Billions of people are expected to experience these conditions in the coming decades, but researchers know little about what the risks are.
Which populations – both demographically and in terms of chronic diseases – are most at risk? Just how dangerous are these double extreme days to human health? Where are the most at-risk populations?
It is thus important to develop an empirical understanding of the relationship between health outcomes and multiple environmental stressors like heat and air quality.
What’s next
Learning who is most at risk is important, but taking preventative measures, everyone together, should also be considered.
Using our models, we found that reducing carbon dioxide and non-CO2 air pollutant emissions – even by a moderate amount far less than what would be required to meet the – would prevent the most severe outcomes.
Even under a very moderate emission reduction scenario called RCP6.0 – – the frequency of double extreme days would increase by only 58% by 2050, compared to the 175% we are headed for. The population and land area to experience extended exposure to this hazard would be less than half of what was projected in the business-as-usual scenario.
These increases are still nothing to look forward to, but they show that mitigation efforts can make a big difference. In our view, the world needs to act swiftly and, for example, seize the opportunity of current economic recovery to . Our future generations do not deserve a dirty, hot future.
