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国家层面与温度相关的死亡率损害函数的估计。

Estimates of country level temperature-related mortality damage functions.

机构信息

School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, New York City, USA.

The Earth Institute at Columbia University, New York City, USA.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2021 Oct 13;11(1):20282. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-99156-5.

Abstract

Many studies project that climate change is expected to cause a significant number of excess deaths. Yet, in integrated assessment models that determine the social cost of carbon (SCC), human mortality impacts do not reflect the latest scientific understanding. We address this issue by estimating country-level mortality damage functions for temperature-related mortality with global spatial coverage. We rely on projections from the most comprehensive published study in the epidemiology literature of future temperature impacts on mortality (Gasparrini et al. in Lancet Planet Health 1:e360-e367, 2017), which estimated changes in heat- and cold-related mortality for 23 countries over the twenty-first century. We model variation in these mortality projections as a function of baseline climate, future temperature change, and income variables and then project future changes in mortality for every country. We find significant spatial heterogeneity in projected mortality impacts, with hotter and poorer places more adversely affected than colder and richer places. In the absence of income-based adaptation, the global mortality rate in 2080-2099 is expected to increase by 1.8% [95% CI 0.8-2.8%] under a lower-emissions RCP 4.5 scenario and by 6.2% [95% CI 2.5-10.0%] in the very high-emissions RCP 8.5 scenario relative to 2001-2020. When the reduced sensitivity to heat associated with rising incomes, such as greater ability to invest in air conditioning, is accounted for, the expected end-of-century increase in the global mortality rate is 1.1% [95% CI 0.4-1.9%] in RCP 4.5 and 4.2% [95% CI 1.8-6.7%] in RCP 8.5. In addition, we compare recent estimates of climate-change induced excess mortality from diarrheal disease, malaria and dengue fever in 2030 and 2050 with current estimates used in SCC calculations and show these are likely underestimated in current SCC estimates, but are also small compared to more direct temperature effects.

摘要

许多研究预计,气候变化将导致大量额外死亡。然而,在确定碳的社会成本(SCC)的综合评估模型中,人类死亡率的影响并没有反映最新的科学认识。我们通过估计具有全球空间覆盖范围的与温度相关的死亡率的国家一级死亡率损害函数来解决这个问题。我们依赖于流行病学文献中关于未来温度对死亡率影响的最全面的已发表研究(Gasparrini 等人在《柳叶刀星球健康》1:e360-e367,2017 年)中的温度相关死亡率预测,该研究估计了 21 世纪 23 个国家的热相关和冷相关死亡率的变化。我们将这些死亡率预测的变化建模为基线气候、未来温度变化和收入变量的函数,然后为每个国家预测未来的死亡率变化。我们发现,预计的死亡率影响存在显著的空间异质性,较热和较贫穷的地方比较冷和较富裕的地方受到的影响更大。在没有基于收入的适应措施的情况下,与 2001-2020 年相比,在排放较低的 RCP4.5 情景下,到 2080-2099 年,全球死亡率预计将增加 1.8%[95%置信区间为 0.8-2.8%],而在排放较高的 RCP8.5 情景下,全球死亡率预计将增加 6.2%[95%置信区间为 2.5-10.0%]。当考虑到与收入上升相关的对热量敏感性降低的因素,例如投资空调的能力增加时,到本世纪末,全球死亡率预计在 RCP4.5 下增加 1.1%[95%置信区间为 0.4-1.9%],在 RCP8.5 下增加 4.2%[95%置信区间为 1.8-6.7%]。此外,我们还比较了 2030 年和 2050 年腹泻病、疟疾和登革热引起的气候变化导致的超额死亡的最新估计值与 SCC 计算中目前使用的估计值,并表明这些估计值在目前的 SCC 估计值中可能被低估了,但与更直接的温度影响相比,这些估计值也很小。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cc6d/8514527/6179b7974bee/41598_2021_99156_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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