PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Annual heat-related deaths projected to increase significantly due to climate and population change

The annual number of heat-related deaths in England and Wales is set to rise up to fiftyfold over the next 50 years because of climate change, finds new research by UCL and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

2025-07-10
(Press-News.org) UCL Press Release
Under embargo until Thursday 10 July 2025, 19:00 UK time, 14:00 US Eastern time

 

Annual heat-related deaths projected to increase significantly due to climate and population change

The annual number of heat-related deaths in England and Wales is set to rise up to fiftyfold over the next 50 years because of climate change, finds new research by UCL and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

Their paper, published in PLoS Climate, analysed the impacts of 15 different combined climate change and socio-economic scenarios over the next fifty years, comparing different levels of warming, different amounts of adaptation to protect against the effects of a warming climate, aging populations, regional climatic differences and the potential impact of power outages – a new approach for heat impact projections. Together, they are the most comprehensive projections for the impact of climate change on the population of England and Wales for the next century.

The researchers found that even under the most optimistic scenario, associated with 1.6 degrees of warming over preindustrial levels by the end of the century and with high levels of adaptation, the annual number of heat-related deaths will increase up to sixfold. Today’s baseline of 634 annual heat-related deaths will rise to 3,007 per year in the 2050s, 4,004 in the 2060s and up to 4,592 in the 2070s. The worst-case scenario, with 4.3 degrees of warming over the same period and minimal adaptation, would see up to a more than fifty-fold increase in heat-related deaths to 10,317 in the 2050s, 19,478 in the 2060s, and 34,027 in the 2070s.

Potential adaptations could include steps such as adopting passive cooling systems like cool and green roofs, better building ventilation and heat management, active cooling systems such as air conditioning, shady urban forests and greater community support for vulnerable populations.

For comparison, the record-setting hot summer of 2022 saw 2,985 excess heat deaths, indicating a potential “new normal” by as early as the 2050s. For the low emissions scenario this would mean an additional 21 to 32 significantly hotter than average days per year, and an additional 64 to 73 such hot days under the high emission scenario.

Senior author, Dr Clare Heaviside (UCL Bartlett School Environment, Energy & Resources), said: “Our collaborative research paints a sobering picture of the consequences of climate change, under a range of potential social and economic pathways. Over the next fifty years, the health impacts of a warming climate are going to be significant. We can mitigate their severity by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and with carefully planned adaptations, but we have to start now.”

Over the next fifty years, the population of England and Wales is expected to age significantly, with the greatest increase in population size for those aged 65 and over by the 2060s. Most previous research into the future impact of heat mortality didn’t factor in the impact of an ageing population, leading to an underestimation of its mortality.

This study broke England and Wales into nine regions to analyse the impact of climate change in different areas. Generally, heat mortality rates in the North are projected to increase less than rates in the warmer south across the different scenarios, but there is some variation.

In addition, the researchers modelled different levels of adaptation for a warming climate and the outcomes it would have on heat-related mortality. This includes factors such as health infrastructure, levels of urbanisation, energy infrastructure, inequality, fossil fuel emissions, adoption of air conditioning or other passive cooling technologies.

They found that the more adaptation society undertakes, the lower the heat-related mortality. But, while under lower levels of warming, adaptation plays a more significant role in reducing mortality, under the higher levels of warming, its effectiveness is reduced.

To test the resilience of the various adaptations, the researchers modelled a power outage over ten consecutive hot days under the various adaptation scenarios under the projected highest level of warming.

They found that with the best adaptation, heat-related mortality wouldn’t increase with a disruption in power services because many of the adaptations such as shading, shutters and cool roofs are passive and don’t rely on electricity. However, in other, less well adapted scenarios where people rely more heavily on air conditioning, heat-related deaths would increase by up to 27% overall, with some regions seeing as high as a 75% increase in heat-related deaths.

Lead author, Dr Rebecca Cole of the Department of Public Health, Environments and Society at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: “How we as a society adapt to our changing climate will have a tremendous effect on people’s wellbeing. Our research shows how increases in heat-related deaths are not just a consequence of rising temperatures — they’re also driven by how we build our cities, care for vulnerable populations, and address social inequality. Concerted adaptation strategies are required, well in excess of those over the last 30 years.”

This research was supported by the National Institute for Health Research.

 

Notes to Editors

For more information or to speak to the researchers involved, please contact Michael Lucibella, UCL Media Relations. T: +44 (0)75 3941 0389, E: m.lucibella@ucl.ac.uk

Rebecca Cole, Kai Wan, Peninah Murage, Helen L. Macintyre, Shakoor Hajat and Clare Heaviside, ‘Projections of heat related mortality under combined climate and socioeconomic adaptation scenarios for England and Wales’ will be published in PLoS Climate on Thursday 10 July 2025, 19:00 UK time, 14:00 US Eastern Time and is under a strict embargo until this time.

Following publication, the paper will be available at: https://journals.plos.org/climate/article?id=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000553

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000553

Additional material

Dr Clare Heaviside’s academic profile Rebecca Cole’s academic profile UCL Bartlett School of Environment, Energy and Resources UCL Faculty of the Built Environment The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine  

About UCL – London’s Global University

UCL is a diverse global community of world-class academics, students, industry links, external partners, and alumni. Our powerful collective of individuals and institutions work together to explore new possibilities.

Since 1826, we have championed independent thought by attracting and nurturing the world's best minds. Our community of more than 50,000 students from 150 countries and over 16,000 staff pursues academic excellence, breaks boundaries and makes a positive impact on real world problems.

The Times and Sunday Times University of the Year 2024, we are consistently ranked among the top 10 universities in the world and are one of only a handful of institutions rated as having the strongest academic reputation and the broadest research impact.

We have a progressive and integrated approach to our teaching and research – championing innovation, creativity and cross-disciplinary working. We teach our students how to think, not what to think, and see them as partners, collaborators and contributors.  

For almost 200 years, we are proud to have opened higher education to students from a wide range of backgrounds and to change the way we create and share knowledge.

We were the first in England to welcome women to university education and that courageous attitude and disruptive spirit is still alive today. We are UCL.

www.ucl.ac.uk | Follow @uclnews.bsky.social on Bluesky | Read news at www.ucl.ac.uk/news/ | Listen to UCL podcasts on SoundCloud | View images on Flickr | Find out what’s on at UCL Minds

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers discover new way cells protect themselves from damage

2025-07-10
An international team led by researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Dalhousie University, the University of Exeter (UK) and the Medical University of Vienna (Austria) has uncovered a surprising way compartments within cells work together to defend themselves against oxidative stress, a finding that could shift how we understand age-associated conditions such as diabetes and neurodegenerative diseases.   Published today in Science, the study reveals a newly identified mechanism between two key compartments of the cell (mitochondria ...

Rivers choose their path based on erosion — a discovery that could transform flood planning and restoration

2025-07-10
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Rivers are Earth’s arteries. Water, sediment and nutrients self-organize into diverse, dynamic channels as they journey from the mountains to the sea. Some rivers carve out a single pathway, while others divide into multiple interwoven threads. These channel patterns shape flood risks, erosion hazards and ecosystem services for more than 3 billion people who live along river corridors worldwide. Understanding why some waterways form single channels, while others divide into many threads, has perplexed researchers for over a century. ...

New discovery reveals dopamine operates with surgical precision, not as a broad signal

2025-07-10
AURORA, Colo. (July 10, 2025) – A new study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus has upended decades of neuroscience dogma, revealing that dopamine, a neurotransmitter critical for movement, motivation, learning and mood, communicates in the brain with extraordinary precision, not broad diffusion as previously believed. This groundbreaking research offers fresh hope for millions of people living with dopamine-related disorders, marking a significant advance in the quest for precision-based neuroscience and medicine. For years, scientists thought of ...

New AI tool gives a helping hand to x ray diagnosis

2025-07-10
Can artificial intelligence, or AI, potentially transform health care for the better?   Now, rising to the challenge, an Arizona State University team of researchers has built a powerful new AI tool, called Ark+, to help doctors read chest X‑rays better and improve health care outcomes.   “Ark+ is designed to be an open, reliable and ultimately useful tool in real-world health care systems,” said Jianming “Jimmy” Liang, an ASU professor from the College of Health Solutions, and lead author of the study recently published in the prestigious journal Nature.   In a proof-of-concept study, the new AI tool demonstrated ...

New Leicester study reveals hidden heart risks in women with Type 2 Diabetes

2025-07-10
Women with type 2 diabetes are nearly twice as likely as men to have hidden heart damage, according to a major new study by Leicester researchers funded through a National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Professorship.  The research, published in the Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, is one of the most detailed investigations into coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) to uncover sex-specific risk patterns in people with no signs of heart disease.  CMD is a form of early, silent heart damage caused by impaired blood flow in the ...

Over 400 different types of nerve cell have been grown – far more than ever before

2025-07-10
Nerve cells are not just nerve cells. Depending on how finely we distinguish, there are several hundred to several thousand different types of nerve cell in the human brain according to the latest calculations. These cell types vary in their function, in the number and length of their cellular appendages, and in their interconnections. They emit different neurotransmitters into our synapses and, depending on the region of the brain – for example, the cerebral cortex or the midbrain – different cell ...

Newly discovered molecule may explain reduced muscle mass in type 2 diabetes

2025-07-10
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have discovered a previously unknown molecule that may explain why people with type 2 diabetes often suffer from muscle weakness and muscle loss – a condition that has a major impact on quality of life and overall health. In the new study, published in Sciences Advances, researchers have identified a previously unknown molecule, TMEM9B-AS1, which may explain why people with type 2 diabetes often suffer from muscle weakness and loss of muscle mass. The molecule is a long non-coding RNA that plays ...

Rheumatoid arthritis and muscle wasting: New review points to overlooked complications

2025-07-10
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune disease that affects individuals across all ages and genders. While its most visible impact is on the joints, RA also contributes to accelerated musculoskeletal ageing, often leading to progressive muscle degeneration and reduced muscle function. Emerging research has identified a specific form of muscle loss in RA—known as myopenia—which differs significantly from other disease-related muscle-wasting conditions such as cancer cachexia or heart failure. Unlike those conditions, myopenia is characterized by a decline in muscle mass without concurrent fat loss and can manifest across all age groups. Despite ...

Overcoming intrinsic dispersion locking by misaligned bilayer metagratings

2025-07-10
Wavelength and propagation direction (angle) are two fundamental properties of light. The ability to selectively control both a specific wavelength and a specific angle forms the physical foundation for many advanced optical applications. However, due to the intrinsic dispersion in periodic systems, there exists an intrinsic locking relationship between angle and wavelength in the resonant spectrum. As a result, it has been widely accepted that changing the angle of incidence inevitably shifts the filtering wavelength of optical devices. This relationship between angle and wavelength in resonant spectra makes their independent ...

Vaccines work: Cohort data from Denmark show real-world evidence of stable protection against HPV-related cervical cancer

2025-07-10
Among the more than 100 types of human papillomavirus (HPV), at least 14 are considered as ‘high-risk’ types which can cause (cervical) cancer. After breast cancer, cervical cancer is the most common cancer in Europe among women aged 15–44 years [1]. Before HPV vaccination among teenage girls started in Denmark, high-risk HPV was found in all cervical cancers. HPV types 16/18 accounted for around three quarters (74%) of cervical cancers. These two types are covered in the 4-valent HPV vaccine offered to girls since 2008 as well as the 9-valent vaccine which has been in use in Denmark since November 2017. One third (26%) of cervical cancers prior to the HPV immunisation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Toxic metals linked to impaired growth in infants in Guatemala

Being consistently physically active in adulthood linked to 30–40% lower risk of death

Nerve pain drug gabapentin linked to increased dementia, cognitive impairment risks

Children’s social care involvement common to nearly third of UK mums who died during perinatal period

‘Support, not judgement’: Study explores links between children’s social care involvement and maternal deaths

Ethnic minority and poorer children more likely to die in intensive care

Major progress in fertility preservation after treatment for cancer of the lymphatic system

Fewer complications after additional ultrasound in pregnant women who feel less fetal movement

Environmental impact of common pesticides seriously underestimated

The Milky Way could be teeming with more satellite galaxies than previously thought

New study reveals surprising reproductive secrets of a cricket-hunting parasitoid fly

Media Tip Sheet: Symposia at ESA2025

NSF CAREER Award will power UVA engineer’s research to improve drug purification

Tiny parasitoid flies show how early-life competition shapes adult success

New coating for glass promises energy-saving windows

Green spaces boost children’s cognitive skills and strengthen family well-being

Ancient trees dying faster than expected in Eastern Oregon

Study findings help hone precision of proven CVD risk tool

Most patients with advanced melanoma who received pre-surgical immunotherapy remain alive and disease free four years later

Introducing BioEmu: A generative AI Model that enables high-speed and accurate prediction of protein structural ensembles

Replacing mutated microglia with healthy microglia halts progression of genetic neurological disease in mice and humans

New research shows how tropical plants manage rival insect tenants by giving them separate ‘flats’

Condo-style living helps keep the peace inside these ant plants

Climate change action could dramatically limit rising UK heatwave deaths

Annual heat-related deaths projected to increase significantly due to climate and population change

Researchers discover new way cells protect themselves from damage

Rivers choose their path based on erosion — a discovery that could transform flood planning and restoration

New discovery reveals dopamine operates with surgical precision, not as a broad signal

New AI tool gives a helping hand to x ray diagnosis

New Leicester study reveals hidden heart risks in women with Type 2 Diabetes

[Press-News.org] Annual heat-related deaths projected to increase significantly due to climate and population change
The annual number of heat-related deaths in England and Wales is set to rise up to fiftyfold over the next 50 years because of climate change, finds new research by UCL and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.