Cost of future extreme heat events high for humans and the B.C. economy: report
Global News
The report by the Canadian Climate Institute broke down the costs of the 2021 B.C. heat dome, during which more than 600 people died and hundreds more were sent to hospital.
A new report is painting a bleak picture of the costs of future extreme heat events, both human and financial, if the government doesn’t take action.
The report by the Canadian Climate Institute broke down the costs of the 2021 B.C. heat dome, during which more than 600 people died.
It predicts that factoring in climate change, by 2030 extreme heat could kill more than 1,300 people each year and send 6,000 to the hospital.
The potential financial cost could be $100 million per year in health care and more than $12 billion in annual societal costs.
“Extreme heat is going to get worse. Climate models indicate that sustained temperatures similar to the 2021 heat wave have a 10 per cent chance of reoccurring in B.C. within the next two decades,” the report states.
“By mid-century, B.C. could experience temperatures similar to the heat wave an average of three out of every ten years if global greenhouse gas emissions are not substantially reduced.”
The report states that B.C. is not the only province at risk as many parts of Canada will see a substantial increase in the number of days where heat can harm people and the economy.
“We have to accelerate everything we’re doing to protect people from extreme heat as quickly as possible because the next heat wave could occur at any time as we’re seeing across the country right now,” Ryan Ness with the Canadian Climate Institute told Global News.