The World Economic Forum on Tuesday disclosed that the climate change threatens to cause several million deaths in the coming decades, as well as serious illnesses and high costs for healthcare systems.
According to the News Agency of Nigeria, this was made known by the Davos report, adding that the greatest risk is posed by flooding.
The authors of the study identified six key consequences of climate change as Floods, droughts, heat waves, tropical storms, forest fires and rising sea levels.
The study is based on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s medium scenario for temperature rise by 2100, which assumes an increase in the average temperature of 2.7 degrees Celsius.
The study noted that the climate change could then cause up to 14.5 million deaths worldwide by 2050.
Healthcare systems would have to bear additional costs totalling $1.1 trillion.
Giving the estimates, flooding alone could cause 8.5 million deaths by 2050 not only directly, but also indirectly through crop damage, increased infectious diseases and higher humidity.
The Asia-Pacific region, with its heavily populated coastal regions, is likely to bear the brunt of this.
The authors expect the second-highest mortality rate of 3.2 million deaths to be caused by droughts primarily due to the long-term effects of declining water quality and less fertile soils on child mortality.
The report also said heatwaves could cost around 1.6 million lives by 2050, especially among older people.
It also anticipated that there would be an increase in illnesses and cases of occupational disability.
Warmer temperatures, for example, could cause mosquitoes to spread significantly, making malaria, dengue fever and Zika infections more common in Europe and the U.S.
Overall, however, according to t
The study, overall, however, regions in Africa, the Middle East and Asia would be particularly affected by the health consequences of climate change.
The results of the report are to be discussed at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.