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Hundreds of millions of people struggled to keep cool amid a sweltering summer heat wave as cities across the US and mainland Europe experienced record-high temperatures. In the UK, thermometers topped 104 Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) on 19 July 2022, the highest ever recorded.
While all this broiling heat is surely punishing on a personal level, it also has significant impacts on the broader economy.
As an economist who has studied the effects of weather and climate change, I have examined a large body of work that links heat to economic outcomes. Here are four ways extreme heat hurts the economy.
Research has found that extreme heat can directly hurt economic growth.
Laborers in weather-exposed industries such as construction work fewer hours when it’s hotter. But higher summer temperatures also reduce growth in many industries that tend to involve indoor work, including retail, services and finance. Workers are less productive when it’s hotter out.
Agriculture is obviously exposed to weather: After all, crops grow outdoors.
While temperatures up to around 85 F to 90 F (29-32 C) can benefit crop growth, yields fall sharply when thermostats rise further. Some of the crops that can be hit hard by extreme heat include corn, soybeans and cotton. These reductions in yields could be costly for US agriculture.
For example, a recent study I conducted found that an additional 2 degrees C (3.6 F) of global warming would eliminate profits from an average acre of farmland in the eastern US
A prominent example of this was the collapse of the Russian wheat harvest in response to the country’s 2010 heat wave, which raised wheat prices throughout the world.
Of course, when it’s hot, energy use goes up as people and businesses run their air conditioners and other cooling equipment at full blast.
A 2011 study found that just one extra day with temperatures above 90 F (32 C) increases annual household energy use by 0.4 percent. More recent research shows that energy use increases the most in places that tend to be hotter, probably because more households have air conditioning.
This increase in electricity use on hot days stresses electric grids right when people depend on them most, as seen in California and Texas during past heat waves.
Blackouts can be quite costly for the economy, as inventories of food and other goods can spoil and many businesses either have to run generators or shut down. For instance, the 2019 California blackouts cost an estimated US$10 billion.
A long-term impact of increasingly hotter weather involves how it affects children’s ability to learn – and thus their future earnings.
Research has shown that hot weather during the school year reduces test scores. Math scores decrease more and more as the temperature rises beyond 70 F (21 C).
Reading scores are more resistant to high temperatures, which this research claims is consistent with how different regions of the brain respond to heat.
Lost learning results in lower lifetime earnings and hurts future economic growth.
The impact of extreme heat on development, in fact, begins before we’re even born. Research has found that adults who were exposed to extreme heat as fetuses earn less during their lifetimes. Each extra day with average temperature above 90 F (32 C) reduces earnings 30 years later by 0.1 percent.
Air conditioning can offset some of these effects.
For example, studies have found that having a working air conditioner means fewer people die, student learning isn’t compromised and extreme heat outside during pregnancy doesn’t hurt fetuses.
Not everyone has air conditioners, however, especially in states such as Oregon and countries such as the UK that have more temperate climates but have nonetheless recently experienced unusually extreme temperatures.
And many people can’t afford to own or operate them. Survey data from 2017 found that around half of homes in the US Pacific Northwest lacked air conditioning. And about 42 percent of US classrooms lack an air conditioner.
And in the US South, where air conditioning is omnipresent, hotter-than-usual summers still take the greatest toll on states’ economic growth.
In other words, as temperatures rise, economies will continue to suffer.
(Derek Lemoine is a Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Arizona. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)
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