4.7 Article

Climate change and health in Kuwait: temperature and mortality projections under different climatic scenarios

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac7601

Keywords

climate change; Kuwait; Arabian Peninsula; gulf; heat; mortality

Funding

  1. Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Science [CB21-63BO-01]
  2. US Environmental Protection Agency [RD-835872]
  3. Harvard Chan National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Center for Environmental Health [P01ES009825]
  4. US EPA Grant [RD-835872]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The effects of climate change on the hot desert environment of the Arabian Peninsula, particularly in Kuwait, are uncertain. However, it is predicted that average temperatures will rise and this will increase heat-related mortality, especially among vulnerable populations such as migrant workers. The severity of the impact depends on the climate change scenarios, with more extreme scenarios leading to higher mortality rates.
It is uncertain what climate change could bring to populations and countries in the hot desert environment of the Arabian Peninsula. Not only because they are already hot, countries in this region also have unique demographic profiles, with migrant populations potentially more vulnerable and constituting a large share of the population. In Kuwait, two-thirds of the population are migrant workers and record-high temperatures are already common. We quantified the temperature-related mortality burdens in Kuwait in the mid- (2050-2059) and end-century (2090-2099) decades under moderate (SSP2-4.5) and extreme (SSP5-8.5) climate change scenarios. We fitted time series distributed lag non-linear models to estimate the baseline temperature-mortality relationship which was then applied to future daily mean temperatures from the latest available climate models to estimate decadal temperature-mortality burdens under the two scenarios. By mid-century, the average temperature in Kuwait is predicted to increase by 1.80 degrees C (SSP2-4.5) to 2.57 degrees C (SSP5-8.5), compared to a 2000-2009 baseline. By the end of the century, we could see an increase of up to 5.54 degrees C. In a moderate scenario, climate change would increase heat-related mortality by 5.1% (95% empirical confidence intervals: 0.8, 9.3) by end-century, whereas an extreme scenario increases heat-related mortality by 11.7% (2.7, 19.0). Heat-related mortality for non-Kuwaiti migrant workers could increase by 15.1% (4.6, 22.8). For every 100 deaths in Kuwait, 13.6 (-3.6, 25.8) could be attributed to heat driven by climate change by the end of the century. Climate change induced warming, even under more optimistic mitigation scenarios, may markedly increase heat-related mortality in Kuwait. Those who are already vulnerable, like migrant workers, could borne a larger impact from climate change.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available