Abstract

Heat exposure constitutes a major threat for European workers, with significant impacts on the workers’ health and productivity. Climate projections over the next decades show a continuous and accelerated warming over Europe together with longer, more intense and more frequent heatwaves on regional and local scales. In this work, we assess the increased risk in future occupational heat stress levels using the wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT), an index adopted by the International Standards Organization as regulatory index to measure the heat exposure of working people. Our results show that, in large parts of Europe, future heat exposure will indeed exceed critical levels for physically active humans far more often than in today’s climate, and labour productivity might be largely reduced in southern Europe. European industries should adapt to the projected changes to prevent major consequences for the workers’ health and to preserve economic productivity.

Highlights

  • Mean surface temperature as well as the frequency and duration of heat waves have increased in the last decades in Europe (IPCC 2013), in particular in the south-east of the continent (Pogačar et al 2018; Barriopedro et al 2011; Morabito et al 2017)

  • Overall, environmental heat exposure is projected to increase in the course of the twenty-first century in Europe

  • Changes in environmental heat exposure due to climate change are highly relevant to stakeholders and policy makers in order to respond to possible impacts on the main European industries

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Summary

Introduction

Mean surface temperature as well as the frequency and duration of heat waves have increased in the last decades in Europe (IPCC 2013), in particular in the south-east of the continent (Pogačar et al 2018; Barriopedro et al 2011; Morabito et al 2017). Future heat waves are very likely to be more frequent and longer-lasting (IPCC 2013), mainly as a direct consequence of the increase in mean temperatures (Schär, et al 2004; Fischer and Schär 2010) Those changes relate to increasing environmental heat exposure throughout the twenty-first century (Willett and Sherwood 2010; Zhao et al 2015; Knutson and Ploshay 2016; Coffel et al 2018; Li et al 2018; Matthews 2018) which in turn might have an effect on mortality, well-being and labour productivity (Dunne et al 2013; Kjellstrom et al 2018; Mora et al 2017; Flouris et al 2018; Levi et al 2018; Moda et al 2019).

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Evaluation of the bias correction
Results
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Discussion and conclusions
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Full Text
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