Climate change linked to nearly 100,000 heatwave deaths in 2023 - Study

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People run on a sidewalk around the Imperial Palace on a hot day in Tokyo on June 28, 2025. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)

The study found that 2023’s record-breaking heatwaves caused 178,486 excess deaths worldwide, equivalent to 23 deaths per million, with more than half linked to human-driven climate change.

MELBOURNE - Nearly 100,000 deaths from the unprecedented heatwaves of 2023 were attributed to human-induced climate change, according to an Australian-led global study, reported Xinhua.

The study found that 2023’s record-breaking heatwaves caused 178,486 excess deaths worldwide, equivalent to 23 deaths per million, with more than half linked to human-driven climate change.

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Based on climate and mortality data from 2,013 locations across 67 countries and regions, the international research team found that roughly 54 per cent of these fatalities - nearly 97,000 deaths - were attributable to manmade global warming.

The researchers found the 2023 heatwaves occurred during the hottest year on record, 1.45 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

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Southern Europe recorded the highest 2023 heatwave death rate at 120 per million, followed by Eastern and Western Europe, according to researchers from Australia's Monash University and global partners.

Heatwave-related deaths were concentrated in subtropical and temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere, where prolonged extreme temperatures exacerbated cardiovascular, respiratory and other chronic health conditions, the study said.

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The findings highlight "the urgent need for adaptive public health interventions and climate mitigation strategies to reduce future mortality burdens in the context of increasing global warming," it said. - BERNAMA-XINHUA