Guest essay by Eric Worrall
Despite humans being tropical apes, we apparently find it very difficult to survive outside of temperate zones where average annual temperature ranges from 52F – 59F (11C-15C).
Climate change could bring near-unliveable conditions for 3bn people, say scientists
Each degree of warming above present levels corresponds to roughly 1bn people falling outside of ‘climate niche’
Steven Bernard, Dan Clark and Sam Joiner
Up to 3bn out of the projected world population of about 9bn could be exposed to temperatures on a par with the hottest parts of the Sahara by 2070, according to research by scientists from China, US and Europe.
However, rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could halve the number of people exposed to such hot conditions. “The good news is that these impacts can be greatly reduced if humanity succeeds in curbing global warming,” said study co-author Tim Lenton, climate specialist and director of the Global Systems Institute at Exeter university.
The report highlights how the majority of humans live in a very narrow mean annual temperature band of 11C-15C (52F-59F). Researchers noted that despite all innovations and migrations, people had mostly lived in these climate conditions for several thousand years.
“This strikingly constant climate niche likely represents fundamental constraints on what humans need to survive and thrive,” said Professor Marten Scheffer of Wageningen University, who co-ordinated the research with his Chinese colleague Chi Xu, of Nanjing University.
…
Read more: https://www.ft.com/content/072b5c87-7330-459b-a947-be6767a1099d
The abstract of the study;
Future of the human climate niche
Chi Xu, Timothy A. Kohler, Timothy M. Lenton, Jens-Christian Svenning, and Marten Scheffer
All species have an environmental niche, and despite technological advances, humans are unlikely to be an exception. Here, we demonstrate that for millennia, human populations have resided in the same narrow part of the climatic envelope available on the globe, characterized by a major mode around ∼11 °C to 15 °C mean annual temperature (MAT). Supporting the fundamental nature of this temperature niche, current production of crops and livestock is largely limited to the same conditions, and the same optimum has been found for agricultural and nonagricultural economic output of countries through analyses of year-to-year variation. We show that in a business-as-usual climate change scenario, the geographical position of this temperature niche is projected to shift more over the coming 50 y than it has moved since 6000 BP. Populations will not simply track the shifting climate, as adaptation in situ may address some of the challenges, and many other factors affect decisions to migrate. Nevertheless, in the absence of migration, one third of the global population is projected to experience a MAT >29 °C currently found in only 0.8% of the Earth’s land surface, mostly concentrated in the Sahara. As the potentially most affected regions are among the poorest in the world, where adaptive capacity is low, enhancing human development in those areas should be a priority alongside climate mitigation.
Read more: https://www.pnas.org/content/117/21/11350
My home in Queensland, Australia, experiences an average annual temperature of around 77F (25C), 18F above the alleged human climate niche.
Last time I checked our state enjoyed a prosperous agriculture and mining economy, with vibrant cities full of happy people who mostly don’t own heavy overcoats.
The far North of Australia which includes some of our most prosperous agricultural and mining regions, are even hotter.
Then you have nations like Singapore, Indonesia, Kenya, and Colombia, all established or up and coming economic success stories which sit right on the equator. Venezuela used to be successful, but their problems have nothing to do with global warming.
These glaring exceptions to the “human environmental niche” should be considered strong evidence that prosperity is possible outside the 52F – 59F zone where the bulk of people live. But the authors dismiss this, arguing there is a ongoing causal element to human distribution.
…
The Question of Causality.
Why have humans remained concentrated so consistently in the same small part of the potential climate space? The full complex of mechanisms responsible for the patterns is obviously hard to unravel. The constancy of the core distribution of humans over millennia in the face of accumulating innovations is suggestive of a fundamental link to temperature. However, one could argue that the realized niche may merely reflect the ancient needs of agrarian production. Perhaps, people stayed and populations kept expanding in those places, even if the corresponding climate conditions had become irrelevant? Three lines of evidence suggest that this is unlikely, and that instead human thriving remains largely constrained to the observed realized temperature niche for causal reasons.
First, an estimated 50% of the global population depends on smallholder farming (19), and much of the energy input in such systems comes from physical work carried out by farmers, which can be strongly affected by extreme temperatures (20). Second, high temperatures have strong impacts (21⇓–23), affecting not only physical labor capacity but also mood, behavior, and mental health through heat exhaustion and effects on cognitive and psychological performance (20, 24, 25). The third, and perhaps most striking, indication for causality behind the temperature optimum we find is that it coincides with the optimum for economic productivity found in a study of climate-related dynamics in 166 countries (12). To eliminate confounding effects of historical, cultural, and political differences, that study focused on the relation within countries between year-to-year differences in economic productivity and temperature anomalies. The ∼13 °C optimum in MAT they find holds globally across agricultural and nonagricultural activity in rich and poor countries. Thus, based on an entirely different set of data, that economic study independently points to the same temperature optimum we infer.
Altogether, it seems plausible that the historically stable association between human distribution and temperature reflects a causal link rather than a legacy, contingent on ancient patterns reflecting agrarian needs or still-more-ancient hunter-gatherer preferences. This supports the view that the historically stable and tight relationship of human distribution to MAT represents a human temperature niche reflecting fundamental constraints on human populations.
…
Read more: https://www.pnas.org/content/117/21/11350
I mean I guess its possible all this mild weather is bad for my health. Perhaps all the comfortable year round temperatures and our harsh diet of BBQ meat, fresh salad, beer, beach parties and outdoor living all year round will eventually finish us. But in my opinion the authors need to present stronger evidence than a demographic map, and a failure to address exceptions to their environmental niche hypothesis.
Update (EW): Added the full study discussion on “Causality”.
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Another way of looking at this nonsense is to ask why are humans different to other animals requiring a niche environment? If it were the case then how can the elephants that are in the zoo near me (52 degrees north) manage to survive? Likewise the different great apes and monkeys?
Presumably, these folks managed to miss the ~1.3 Billion folk who live in India with an annual average temperature of >25C. No doubt that Indian folk have had their brains addled by the heat.
They might have checked out the correlation between human habitation and rainfall. It is noticeable that humans don’t tend to inhabit desert environments, hot or cold. I wonder why that is?
I note that this is a publication in PNAS, which as far as I know does not require peer review. This paper would have failed the chuckle test.
Along which latitudes do the most humans live? I suspect it is from the equator to the 49th parallel north and south.
¨…the coldest phase of the Little Ice Age in Europe (1560 to 1660 AD) has been causally linked to a peak of migration (1580 to 1650 AD) and a European population collapse to a minimum in 1650 AD…¨
Nuts. That was the 100 years War, called the 30 years War in polite company.
Same as today, migration is caused by war, economic collapse. To wash befouled hands with CO2 is the establishment tactic at FLOP26.
Someone please inform me WHERE do those numbskulls get that twaddle?
If we’re so very, very vulnerable to walloping highs and lows in temperature, how come people go skiing, snowshoeing, and sledding in the winter, and how come people go running off to beaches where they can wear skimpy “clothing” in the heat of a sunny day?
Please explain that to me, because I have managed to survive all the hellishly cold winters that the Midwest has ever had to offer since I was 5 years old and we moved from the sandy plains of Brownwood, TX to central Illinois. I can confirm that being stationed at NAVSTA Great Lakes in the winter is ABSOLUTELY NO FUN. It was misery in 1972 and you can ask anyone – including any recruits from sunny climes – just how much fun it is NOT!! Even so, we all managed to survive, and even the oreboat people who move stuff from the Mesabi taconite digs (shut down now because of Covid stuff) to other places functioned managed to somehow survive the beastly cold of the Great Lakes, never mind our surviving the beastly heat and humidity of Chicago-area summers.
So this is TOTALLY BOGUS, MAN!!!!
Also, I would like to know what planet outside our solar system those “experts” reside on? Only asking because they sure as all get-out don’t come from THIS planet.
“Why have humans remained concentrated so consistently in the same small part of the potential climate space?”
Because that is where the water is (mostly near the sea). People need water to drink, grow crops and run industries. Rivers and seas are also a significant factor in World trade. People live better if they trade with each other.
Fortunately, global warming is meant to make the Earth wetter so an increase in temperature will not kill us all.
Anyway, the idea that the average temperature is relevant is daft. A hot country doesn’t become more habitable just because it has a couple of months at -20 every year.
So, to summarise: Ever since humans learnt to control fire, they have been able to live in colder climates than are ideal for their comfort and survival. Advancements in construction and heating, along with exploitation of fossil fuels have led to human habitation in even colder climates.
At 52F I have to wear gloves, a winter jacket, hat, long pants. Hell I am cold at that temp.
Pretty much the stupidest scientific commentary I’ve ever seen. I thought “Global warming” was supposed to manifest itself primarily in the Northern latitudes. Have they even determined what the rise has been in the parts of the world that are warm already? I think the population of Nigeria alone is projected to hit a billion by 2100. Are they planning to move these people to the Arctic? Should we ask them if they want o go or just force them -for their own good?
These clowns just branded themselves as non-scientists and lousy activists, all in one shot.
Good grief!
If true, why have people stayed so long north of the Artic circle. Over a million people total still living there.
It also appears that the author is ignoring the human need to eat food and grow and harvest food.
Eric, this article was hilarious. I’ll trade you some fresh Oysters from Coos Bay for some of that BBQ Australian beef. OHHAHAHA. Keep it up my friend…
A colleague of Tim Lenton at Exeter is James Dyke who has recently published a book entitled Fire, Storm and Flood the Violence of Climate Change.
Says it all really
The latest Time Magazine is loaded with climate crap- the cover shows John “with a $700 haircut” Kerry- looking dapper in his expensive suit. Not the kind of guy to be trusted by working stiffs.
Has Time magazine ever apologized to the world for naming Greta Thunberg its “Person of the Year” in 2019?
The video of Greta’s rabble rousing outside the COP26 conference tells anyone all the need to know about the wisdom of that selection.
Mad Dogs and Englishmen by Noel Coward
In tropical climes there are certain times of day
When all the citizens retire
To tear their clothes off and perspire.
It’s one of those rules that the greatest fools obey,
Because the sun is much too sultry
And one must avoid its ultry-violet ray.
The native grieve when the white men leave their huts,
Because they’re obviously definitely nuts!
Mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday sun,
The Japanese don’t care to.
The Chinese wouldn’t dare to,
Hindus and Argentines sleep firmly from twelve to one.
But Englishmen detest a siesta.
In the Philippines
There are lovely screens
To protect you from the glare.
In the Malay States
There are hats like plates
Which the Britishers won’t wear.
At twelve noon
The natives swoon
And no further work is done.
But mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday sun.
It’s such a surprise for the Eastern eyes to see
That though the English are effete,
They’re quite impervious to heat,
When the white man rides every native hides in glee,
Because the simple creatures hope he
Will impale his solar topee on a tree.
It seems such a shame
When the English claim
The earth
That they give rise to such hilarity and mirth.
Mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday sun.
The toughest Burmese bandit
Can never understand it.
In Rangoon the heat of noon
Is just what the natives shun.
They put their Scotch or Rye down
And lie down.
In a jungle town
Where the sun beats down
To the rage of man and beast
The English garb
Of the English sahib
Merely gets a bit more creased.
In Bangkok
At twelve o’clock
They foam at the mouth and run,
But mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday sun.
Mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday sun.
The smallest Malay rabbit
Deplores this foolish habit.
In Hong Kong
They strike a gong
And fire off a noonday gun
To reprimand each inmate
Who’s in late.
In the mangrove swamps
Where the python romps
There is peace from twelve till two.
Even caribous
Lie around and snooze;
For there’s nothing else to do.
In Bengal
To move at all
Is seldom, if ever done.
But mad dogs and Englishmen
Go out in the midday
Out in the midday
Out in the midday
Out in the midday
Out in the midday
Out in the midday
Out in the midday sun.
Taking at face value the commonly-cited 2 degree C increase in average global temperature expected to occur in the next century (next 50 years, next 9.5 years, whatever…the goalposts are endlessly moving), such an increase would be the equivalent of moving about 173 statute miles due south (in the northern hemisphere). So if you moved 173 miles south of wherever you are now (excluding people in places like Houston or New Orleans, who would drown in the Gulf of Mexico), would you starve to death as a result of no longer being able to grow food, or instantly burst into flames, or become a victim of “extreme weather?” Hardly.
The “climate change” that should be feared is global COOLING. I’ll see your dinosaur paradise and raise you half a continent buried under a mile of ice. We can easily adapt to warming equivalent to taking a short drive south today, but significant cooling would shorten growing seasons, reduce food availability, and possibly cause the very social unrest that “warmists” constantly fantasize will result “any time now” from a negligible increase in temperature.
Death from overeating takes longer than the opposite. Cf. today’s average life expectancy.
Average annual temperatures here in Aberdeen is a balmy 8.1°C, I look forward to the year 2100, when global warming will make my city inhabitable by humans, who will hopefully drive out the hairy troglodytes who currently reside here.
Chi Xu
Everytime.