Monday, July 13, 2026
40.4 C
New Delhi

Scientists warn! Climate change could kill millions in Europe by 2099

Scientists warn! Climate change could kill millions in Europe by 2099

A major study published in Nature Medicine has issued a stark warning for Europe’s future. Led by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), the research projects that over 2.3 million additional deaths could occur across European cities by 2099 due to rising temperatures driven by climate change. Covering data from 854 urban areas in 30 countries, the study emphasizes that while cold-related deaths may decline, the overwhelming surge in heat-related mortality will far outweigh any benefits. The findings highlight the urgent need for decisive carbon reduction and climate action.

Mediterranean and central Europe face the greatest risk

The study identifies southern and central Europe as the hardest-hit regions, particularly Mediterranean cities such as Barcelona, Rome, Naples, and Athens. These areas already experience frequent heatwaves, and their ageing populations, dense urbanisation, and high baseline temperatures make them especially vulnerable. By century’s end, Barcelona alone could record more than 246,000 climate-linked deaths. The Balkans and Central European cities are also projected to see dramatic spikes in heat-related fatalities.

Northern Europe: A temporary reprieve

Some northern countries, including Sweden, Finland, and Ireland, may initially experience declines in mortality due to fewer cold-related deaths. However, the benefit is only short-lived. As heat extremes intensify in the late century, even traditionally cooler regions such as Helsinki and Stockholm are projected to shift toward net increases in heat-related mortality.

Why adaptation alone isn’t enough

Researchers stress that adaptation measures like greening cities, improving insulation, and expanding access to air conditioning can help reduce risks. However, even under optimistic adaptation scenarios, the projected death toll remains substantial. The study concludes that without aggressive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, public health interventions will be insufficient to protect millions of lives.

A stark reminder of climate urgency

Professor Antonio Gasparrini, senior author and head of the Environment & Health Modelling Lab at LSHTM, emphasized that the findings debunk the misconception that global warming could yield “beneficial” reductions in mortality. Instead, the study demonstrates a net increase of about 50% in climate-related deaths by 2099 under current emissions trajectories. Up to 70% of these fatalities, however, could be prevented with immediate and decisive climate action.This research echoes previous warnings linking recent deadly heatwaves in Europe to climate change. In June 2025 alone, over 2,300 deaths were attributed to extreme heat. The Nature Medicine findings underscore that unless emissions are drastically cut, Europe faces a staggering and avoidable death toll, highlighting climate change as not only an environmental threat but one of the century’s most urgent public health challenges. Go to Source

Hot this week

‘Will we just watch him succumb?’ : Sonam Wangchuk’s health worsens after 16 days of fast

Sonam Wangchuk’s health visibly worsens as he completes 16 days of hunger strike NEW DELHI: Educator and climate activist Sonam Wangchuk’s health has worsened significantly on the 16th day of his indefinite hunger strike Read More

Where are the Gandhi siblings? Why Wayanad has put Rahul, Priyanka in the line of BJP fire

Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (IANS image) Where are the Gandhi siblings? Read More

Ladakh: Autonomous Hill Councils for all seven districts

Ladakh’s Chief Secretary, Ashish Kundra, has announced that the UTA will constitute an Autonomous Hill Development Council in each of the seven districts. Read More

H&M London Fashion Week event with Nick Knight to offer new angle on the runway show

Published July 13, 2026 H&M will be showing at London Fashion Week again this season with the retailer’s 17 September event being a partnership with photographer Nick Knight and the digital fashion platform he founded, SHOWstudio. Read More

Sunita Ahuja’s Lock Upp 2 Exit Puts Menopause, Diabetes And Anxiety In The Spotlight

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom Sunita Ahuja quit show due to interacting health issues. Menopause complicates diabetes control through hormonal shifts. Read More

Topics

‘Will we just watch him succumb?’ : Sonam Wangchuk’s health worsens after 16 days of fast

Sonam Wangchuk’s health visibly worsens as he completes 16 days of hunger strike NEW DELHI: Educator and climate activist Sonam Wangchuk’s health has worsened significantly on the 16th day of his indefinite hunger strike Read More

Where are the Gandhi siblings? Why Wayanad has put Rahul, Priyanka in the line of BJP fire

Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (IANS image) Where are the Gandhi siblings? Read More

Ladakh: Autonomous Hill Councils for all seven districts

Ladakh’s Chief Secretary, Ashish Kundra, has announced that the UTA will constitute an Autonomous Hill Development Council in each of the seven districts. Read More

H&M London Fashion Week event with Nick Knight to offer new angle on the runway show

Published July 13, 2026 H&M will be showing at London Fashion Week again this season with the retailer’s 17 September event being a partnership with photographer Nick Knight and the digital fashion platform he founded, SHOWstudio. Read More

Sunita Ahuja’s Lock Upp 2 Exit Puts Menopause, Diabetes And Anxiety In The Spotlight

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom Sunita Ahuja quit show due to interacting health issues. Menopause complicates diabetes control through hormonal shifts. Read More

Quote of the day by Muhammad Ali, “The Greatest”: “I try not to speak about all the charities and people I help, because…” –...

Muhammad Ali (Image: Wikipedia) Fame gave Muhammad Ali one of the largest platforms of the twentieth century, and he chose, deliberately, not to use most of it to talk about his own charity work. Read More

‘Your prayers, efforts gave us strength’: Indian Embassy thanks Vietnam as bodies of boat tragedy victims return home

The accident occurred on Saturday when a speedboat carrying 32 Indian tourists and four local crew members capsized near Hon May Rut Ngoai, off Phu Quoc Island (Image credit: AP) NEW DELHI: The mortal remains of the 15 Indian touris Read More

Sam Neill’s Death Brings Rare Blood Cancer Into Focus; What Is AITL And It’s Symptoms

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom Sam Neill’s diagnosis highlighted rare, aggressive blood cancer. AITL presents ambiguous symptoms, making early diagnosis challenging. Read More

Related Articles