City
Epaper

Increasing urban vegetation can save over 1.1 mn lives from heat-related deaths: Study

By IANS | Updated: May 1, 2025 11:12 IST

New Delhi, May 1 Amid increasing global warming and heat-related deaths worldwide, a new study has shown that ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 1 Amid increasing global warming and heat-related deaths worldwide, a new study has shown that expanding urban vegetation cover by 30 per cent could save over one-third of all deaths caused due to heat, saving up to 1.16 million lives globally.

Researchers from Monash University in Australia showed that increasing vegetation levels by 10 per cent, 20 per cent, and 30 per cent would decrease the global population-weighted warm-season mean temperature by 0.08 degrees Celsius, 0.14 degrees Celsius, and 0.19 degrees Celsius, respectively.

It can also prevent 0.86, 1.02, and 1.16 million deaths, respectively.

While increasing greenness has been proposed as a heat-related death mitigation strategy, “this is the first modelling study to estimate both the cooling and modifying effects of greenness, providing a more comprehensive assessment of its benefits in mitigating heat-related mortality,” said Professor Yuming Guo from the varsity.

The findings, published in the journal The Lancet Planetary Health, are based on a 20-year modelling study of the impact of increasing greenness in more than 11,000 urban areas from 2000 to 2019.

Urban areas in Southern Asia, Eastern Europe, and Eastern Asia were found to have the greatest reduction in heat-related deaths.

“These findings indicate that preserving and expanding greenness might be potential strategies to lower temperature and mitigate the health impacts of heat exposure,” Guo said.

Heat exposure is a major public health threat and is increasing due to climate change. Between 2000-2019, heat exposure was associated with 0.5 million deaths per year, accounting for 0.91 per cent of global mortality.

According to Guo, estimates of heat-related deaths are projected to range from 2.5 per cent in North Europe to 16.7 per cent in South-East Asia during 2090-99, “under the most extreme global warming scenarios.”

Studies show that greenness has a cooling effect on temperature, via shading surfaces, deflecting radiation from the sun, and evapotranspiration (evaporation from both the ground and plants) which promotes air convection.

This, in turn, cools the ambient temperature leading to a decrease in population heat exposure, thereby reducing the heat-related mortality burden.

In addition, greenness could also modify other related factors such as mental health, social engagement, physical activity, and air pollution, the researchers said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessTata to set up India's first private helicopter final assembly for Airbus H125

TechnologyFashion, apparel brands account for 60 pc of retail leasing in H1 2025: Report

EntertainmentTwinkle Khanna reveals her best clothing option for a busy day

BusinessCabinet okays 3 pc hike in DA for Central govt staff, DR for pensioners

BusinessFashion, apparel brands account for 60 pc of retail leasing in H1 2025: Report

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyGovt to launch NIELIT Digital University tomorrow, with AI, cybersecurity, data science courses

TechnologySARS-CoV-2 reinfection can spike long Covid risk in kids: The Lancet

TechnologyListed Indian real estate developers healthy despite market headwinds: Report

TechnologyRBI’s steady and cautious outlook gives confidence to businesses, investors: Industry chambers

TechnologyNo proposal to levy charges on UPI transactions: RBI Governor