Guest essay by Eric Worrall
A new study claims that people who live in tropical climates can’t be as productive as people who live in temperate climates – that 13c (55F) is the optimum temperature for human productivity. In the press release, the researchers further claim that warmer temperatures lead to poorer school results and more violence.
The abstract of the study;
Growing evidence demonstrates that climatic conditions can have a profound impact on the functioning of modern human societies, but effects on economic activity appear inconsistent. Fundamental productive elements of modern economies, such as workers and crops, exhibit highly non-linear responses to local temperature even in wealthy countries. In contrast, aggregate macroeconomic productivity of entire wealthy countries is reported not to respond to temperature, while poor countries respond only linearly. Resolving this conflict between micro and macro observations is critical to understanding the role of wealth in coupled human–natural systems and to anticipating the global impact of climate change. Here we unify these seemingly contradictory results by accounting for non-linearity at the macro scale. We show that overall economic productivity is non-linear in temperature for all countries, with productivity peaking at an annual average temperature of 13 °C and declining strongly at higher temperatures. The relationship is globally generalizable, unchanged since 1960, and apparent for agricultural and non-agricultural activity in both rich and poor countries. These results provide the first evidence that economic activity in all regions is coupled to the global climate and establish a new empirical foundation for modelling economic loss in response to climate change, with important implications. If future adaptation mimics past adaptation, unmitigated warming is expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23% by 2100 and widening global income inequality, relative to scenarios without climate change. In contrast to prior estimates, expected global losses are approximately linear in global mean temperature, with median losses many times larger than leading models indicate.
Read more: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature15725.html
According to the Washington Post;
Culling together economic and temperature data for over 100 wealthy and poorer countries alike over 50 years, the researchers assert that the optimum temperature for human productivity is seems to be around 13 degrees Celsius or roughly 55 degrees Fahrenheit, as an annual average for a particular place. Once things get a lot hotter than that, the researchers add, economic productivity declines “strongly.”
“The relationship is globally generalizable, unchanged since 1960, and apparent for agricultural and non-agricultural activity in both rich and poor countries,” write the authors, led by Marshall Burke of Stanford’s Department of Earth System Science, who call their study “the first evidence that economic activity in all regions is coupled to the global climate.” Burke published the study with Solomon Hsiang and Edward Miguel, economists at the University of California, Berkeley.
…
Assuming this relationship between temperature and productivity is correct, that naturally leads to deep questions about its cause. The researchers locate them in two chief places: agriculture and people. In relation to rising temperature, Burke says, “We see that agricultural productivity declines, labor productivity declines, kids do worse on tests, and we see more violence.”
…
However, the new work has already drawn criticism — University of Sussex economist Richard Tol called it “hugely problematic” in an email to the Post — so it remains to be seen what other researchers make of the work.
Even if we accept the study at face value, according to the abstract, unmitigated warming is expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23% by 2100 and widening global income inequality, relative to scenarios without climate change.
Given that the global economy is growing at around 1% per annum per capita, a simple projection still yields a 130% increase in per capita income by 2100 under BAU. A 23% reduction to a 130% gain doesn’t seem such a big deal, in the scheme of things.
(1 + 0.01)85 years = 2.3
2.3 (230%) – the original 100% = 130% gain
I’m concerned that this study may be ignoring a lot of political and historical context. If an equivalent study was performed in the age of the Roman Empire, when much of the world’s economic activity centred on warm countries like Italy and Egypt, it seems likely that the calculated “optimum economic temperature” would have been significantly higher than 13c (55F)
However the simplest criticism of the study is the irrefutable fact that humans are physiologically optimised to extreme tropical conditions.
How would you feel, right now, if you took all your clothes off outdoors? You might feel embarrassed – but that is a cultural response. What you would most likely feel is cold, unless it was a hot day.
We all wear clothes, for comfort, style, and most importantly, to protect ourselves from the cold. Even in my home town on the edge of the tropics, certainly in winter, and for at least part of the Summer, people have to wear clothes, otherwise they get uncomfortably cold.
If you become too hot, such as when performing outdoor physical labour on a hot day, you can adjust your clothing to optimise your body temperature, say by swapping a long sleeve shirt for a t-shirt, wearing shorts, or in extreme cases by peeling down to not much clothing at all. I’ve mowed a large hilly multi-acre lawn with a petrol push mower, on days when the temperature exceeded 110F (45c). I’ll spare you the image of what I was wearing on those days.
My point is, humans are physiologically well adjusted to handling very hot weather, without adverse effects, providing we are acclimatised, providing we stay hydrated, and providing we dress appropriately for the weather. In any climate cooler than the extreme tropics where humans evolved, we have to wear clothes pretty much continuously, to protect ourselves from the cold.
Suggesting that productivity inevitably drops off, as we approach our physiological optimum environmental temperature, in my opinion is just plain silly.
As for the productivity of other plants and animals on which we depend, tropical countries are characterised by their superabundance of natural life, including food plants and animals. Some staple crops such as oats might like it cold – but there is plenty of edible farm produce which thrives in the heat.
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“…..roughly 55 degrees Fahrenheit, as an annual average for a particular place. Once things get a lot hotter than that, the researchers add, economic productivity declines “strongly.”
Does that take into account countries with air conditioning provided by cheap electricity rates? (Schools and factories that have air conditioning?)
55 degrees.
Oregon, home sweet home.
Steve, is that “home sweet home” or home in “Sweet Home”?
My number is 73.
You are not a number…
I bet that’s his “sleep number”.
You can have your number, and be one too.
I believe the real number is 42.
Well…. having worked in many office and lab environments I am pretty sure that setting the thermostat to 55F would cause “lots of complaining” (nice word substituted in that last sentence, i.e. quit yer “complaining”).
I’m pretty sure that quite a few union labor contracts state a minimum working temperature and it’s quite a bit higher than 55F.
So lets set the “Standard Ivory Tower” temp at 55F and see who squeals first…
Cheers, KevinK.
I function quite well in the summer time when temperatures are around 72F. When it gets warmer than this, I need more breaks and water and as a result my productivity goes down some. However, in the winter time when temperatures can go down to -40F, I stay in doors more so than going outside and find the optimal temperature inside for me to be around 76F and I would probably die in the winter time if I could only heat my home to 55F.
Funny, how that is, is it not?
In summer, I am wearing a pair of shorts and a tee shirt and am too way too hot if the thermostat is any higher than about 75. 72 is nice, perhaps a tad chilly if I eat a popsicle.
In winter, I am wearing wool socks, flannel jammies, and fleece top, and freezing my butt off at 72, while drinking gallons of piping hot tea and/or coffee.
What up wit’ dat?
Some years ago I worked alongside someone who had previously been at a senior level in the UK gas industry. He told me that gas sales correlated more closely with the colour of the sky (grey v. blue) and the intensity of the light than with temperature.
“In winter, I am wearing wool socks, flannel jammies, and fleece top, and freezing my butt off at 72”
I’ve learned that with forced air heating, everything else in the room (floor included) is much cooler than the setpoint (average) temperature. Try radiant floor heating. You’ll never go back to forced air again.
Marble tile floors…would have to rip up the whole house.
Besides, those jammy times are relatively few here in SW Florida.
They were a whole lot more frequent where I just moved from in Altamonte Springs.
Now I have a little hot tub dpa thingy built into the swimming pool, connected to a rooftop solar heater, and a heat pump for when it is dark or cloudy
I keep that puppy about 108, and sit in it in the morning, and evening, and lots of time in between.
That hot water will warm a body up for quite a while.
Jump in the pool if it gets too roasty.
Live could be worse.
Just do not tell everyone…this area is filling up fast again, back to pre bubble building rates and sale prices here…like nothing ever happened.
Right now is splendiferously spectacular, weather wise.
My biggest problem…I never feel like working…it is too nice outside.
We knew it already, those superior races of the north … climate science now getting very interesting
Most of us can run faster at 55F than 85F. So, the article seems common sense.
^Further evidence^ that traffy is really the Village Idiot.
Air is denser at 55º than at 85º.
Race to the corner lamp post. I’ll time you.
Ready… Set… . . . GO!
Yes, Humans evolved to function best at the warmer temperatures — but as we evolved so did our parasites and diseases. Hence populations living in these warmer climates tended in the past (and also tend today) to carry a bigger load of parasites and diseases, leading to lower productivity. The ancestors of those who went to live in cooler climates adapted faster technologically than our parasites and diseases could adapt biologically. Consequently these populations enjoyed generally greater productivity and also stronger selection for the human intelligence and social cooperation necessary to survive in a much more hostile climate. Of course with today’s modern medicine, we can head back south to enjoy the warmer climate while avoiding many of the parasites and diseases that made earlier populations living there so unproductive — if we can also avoid the spread of new diseases (like Ebola) from other species into ours…
Very interesting. This heat thing (very hot here in central Washington in July) is likely the reason I was visited by Giardia during August. My productivity went from high to zilch. Modern medicine, my wife thinks, saved me. I think I might have gotten better eventually. She did not want to wait.
A bout of Giardia is typical self-resolving. My family and I, and numerous friends have had Giardia and we have consistently taken no medicine to cure it. It goes away by itself. We came to conclude that fasting helped, however. At the very least, fasting from carbs. But ideally no food seems to help clear it.
“The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease.” – Voltaire
indi says ” ideally no food seems to help ”
Ondansetron (Zofran) will help keep food down, ’cause after a time with no food other issues begin. But what surprised me was the length of time it took for any throughput (bm) after I began eating again. A learning experience, big time.
{Apologies to those doing the “let’s go 55” thing – maybe WUWT can do a post on “WIN” next.}
It is all very simple. When it is cold, you want to warm up chopping firewood, running around instead of walking slowly, etc.
In hot places you want to snooze in the afternoon in a hammock which was invented for just that many moons ago by enterprising humans.
and the average annual temperature of Portland OR is 54.8°F – coincidence or karma? 😉
“The relationship is globally generalizable, unchanged since 1960,”
What? Such a long period in the development of civilization, it must be true. / sarc
that’s bullsh!t.
try to grow tomatoes at 13 degrees.
of course people are more productive because they will f cking freeze to death.
why are populations greater in warmer climes?
A) The study looked at outdoor average temperatures. 13°C might give you tomatoes for a week or two, that’s about what we get in New Hampshire.
B) The study looked at human productivity, not tomato plants.
Summer time—and the liveing is easy. Fish are jumping and the cotton is high
Interestingly enough, some desert tribes – Tuareg, Bedouin, for example – wear black robes in the desert. Possibly apocryphal saying “If I’d known it was going to be this hot, I would have worn a thicker robe.”
All this comes with significant caveats, but is true nevertheless.
All is not as it seems on first glance, possibly.
Cheers.
Do you know how hard it is to keep your whites bright in the desert? Of course everything is black! It hides all stains and makes you look thinner too. “They say the camel adds ten pounds”….or was that camera…I forget. (sarc)
It’s easy to keep them at their whitest, with All Tempa-Cheer!
Of course, most of the time you can only get them dry cleaned…you know…on account of the no water…um, nevermind…
And what is up with that dry cleaning, anyways?
I mean, what cleaning process does not involve a liquid?
Dry cleaning is hanging the item on a clothesline and beasting the dust out of it (to the hillbillies around here).
Menicholas-Sand blasting? Perhaps that keeps their frocks clean? And it’s better suited (pun) to the term dry cleaning that actual dry cleaning is….because it’s not dry at all.
Dawtgtomis-around these parts, we call that “waking up Grandpa”. 🙂
Productivity drops off at my place if it goes over about 25C,…
… because I’m heading off down the beach !! 🙂
ps.. I like my work room at around 20C.
ps.. I DARE this non-thinking twerp to set their air-con to 13C.. all year round. !!
(think of the CO2 power bill in summer 😉 )
I bet they have it set around 20C+/- a little bit.
Crazy Science has replaced Junk Science.
Pulling any ole’ organ stops for Paris …
http://s15.postimg.org/6g6xh4onv/Organ_Stops.jpg
+1.0001
Cool! A tracker.
We would still have the heaters on at work at 13c here in NZ.
I believe it. I’ve long known that 55 degrees is my favorite temp for working moderately hard outdoors, and 71 is my favorite for sitting inside doing nothing.
55 degrees (about what it is now) is my favorite temperature. It’s why I love Autumn and Spring so much.
You would fair miserably in Florida.
But, as I tell all my northern friends, when they insist they like the changing seasons…that if you can get used to, and learn to love 35 degree rain for days straight, and the sun setting at 4:00 PM, just think how fast you could adapt to swimming in warm water and laying in the scorching sun in January?
Sorry, I don’t do lying in the Sun well. Too many more interesting things to do that entail things like climbing mountains and other energetic activities.
Yeah, I could get used to that for a while to. But I am stuck back East, in Terra Flatta.
I love the mountains, and canyons too for that matter…anyplace outside, and especially if there is good geology and such to check out.
More of a hiker than a climber…not that I am afraid of heights, just falling.
I already know very well how broken bones feel, and have come to terms with the fragility of the human body, even if you are tough as nails.
Eckspeshally them ribs…broken ribs ache sumptin awful!
No kidding! One of the most annoying parts of Florida Climate is the summer days where this no difference in temperature and humidity if you are swimming in the ocean or standing on the beach but compared to -15 for a week or two in January/February it would be easy to get used to
I used to tell my wife that Tampa has two seasons. Hot, and Damn it’s hot.
“unmitigated warming is expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23% by 2100 and widening global income inequality”
– compared with the average global income after mitigation and the using of windmills etc for energy………….?
They missed out the key phrase!
Besides when I lived in Canada in the 1970’s the winter indoor temp was set between 20 and 25 C.
This poor kiwi from temperate NZ where we don’t heat houses very much used to sweat his little heart out!
Cheers
Roger
http://www.rogerfromnewzealand.wordpress.com
My last job location before retiring was in China at a new nuke plant in a rural area not too far from Hong Kong. It was very hot and humid even when coming from the southeast. We also had the opportunity to visit Singapore.
My theory is that people will be productive given a government system that promotes free enterprise and punishes corruption. Climate has little to do with it. Free enterprize areas of China are booming. North and South Korea would be another example of how the same culture can be productive and fail.
I agree.
Russia falls into the cold zone that should be productive. It was anything but in the USSR days, ditto for the rest of the soviet-block countries.
China was a non-economy, right up until they instituted capitalist reforms…then they became a powerhouse, and did so while the climate was changing and the oceans working their way up to a rolling boil!
East Germany was a land of poverty, or so I have been led to believe, until reunification and an end to soviet rule…and now look at ’em.
These stats are coincidences of circumstance to a large degree.
But there may be some motivating force when you need to have enough food and fuel and clothing to make it through the winter or you and your whole family will starve and freeze after you have Donner Partied all of the weak and sick into chunky stew.
Retired, ho correct you are. A free people will usually prosper by all measures.
Give that man a cigar.
All one needs to do is read history. The industrial revolution happened first in countries such as the UK, USA and Holland because they had governments that provided the protection for private ownership and companies that permitted businesses to flourish. The centrally planned economies of France and Spain and later the USSR and Red China without laws protecting individual and corporate rights did not prosper.
I recall having an off the record chat with a Soviet era factory manager who we were trying to interest in automation and CAD. He explained the realities
1) There was no incentive for him to take such a risk, he would receive the same pay and conditions regardless
2) There was a massive disincentive. If things went wrong he would be sacked and likely jailed for ‘economic sabotage’. If things went right some senior apparatchnik would take the credit and rewards.
We didn’t make that sale.
Since underground temperatures are pretty constant around mid 50 degrees F, the human race will have to evolve into the Morlocks of H.G. Well’s novel, The Time Machine. – but that’s still 800,000 years in the future.
Here in SW Florida, ground temp is about 75. In West Central Florida, it is 72.
I think that the ground gives a good measure of average annual temp over time.
It varies with the latitude and altitude, and can be distorted by geothermal effects and fossil heat/coolth.
(Yes, I said coolth…so sue me.)
Oh, not that far away – haven’t you seen the proposals for genetically engineering us to be better “humans?”
noaaprogrammer October 21, 2015 at 9:35 pm
Since underground temperatures are pretty constant around mid 50 degrees F, the human race will have to evolve into the Morlocks of H.G. Well’s novel, The Time Machine. – but that’s still 800,000 years in the future.
Ahem,,
michael
Having worked outside in rural Manitscolda, Canada, I can tell you we were motivated to get the job done.
-20C is a temperature at which you want to keep moving, even if dressed for it. I still have my boots, good down to -70C.
Sorry, Manitoba, Canada. 😉
I’d better go crank the A/C up again – it’s 68F in here!
(If you don’t hear from me again, it’s because the wife put me in a loony bin without Internet access…)
But then all the insects go dormant and the birds will die!
Not to mention the bats!