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Climate change, heat stress and labour productivity: A cost methodology for city economies

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors developed a cost methodology that integrates urban climate modelling with labour productivity and economic production to assess the costs of heat stress on city economies either currently or under future climate change scenarios.
Abstract
Cities are particularly vulnerable to heat waves. Despite this, no comprehensive methodology has been developed to assess the costs of heat stress on city economies either currently or under future climate change scenarios. Here, we develop a cost methodology that integrates urban climate modelling with labour productivity and economic production. It is designed to be tailored by policy makers and transferable from one city to another. As such it provides a potentially powerful policy tool for assessing the exposure of different economic sectors and the key mechanisms resulting in urban production losses under climate change. Results show that the impacts of heat on the urban economy are highly variable and depend on characteristics of production, such as the elasticity of substitution between capital and labour, and the relative size of different sectors in the economy. We estimate that in a warm year in the far future (2081-2100), the total losses to the urban economy could range between 0.4% of Gross Value Added (GVA) for London and 9.5% for Bilbao in the absence of adaptation. The averted losses due to adaptation measures such as behaviour change, air conditioning, ventilation, insulation and solar blinds range from -€114 million to over €2.3 billion. The methodology demonstrates the substantial impact that climate change could have on different sectors of the city economy, such as the financial services industry in London.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the impact of heat waves on surface urban heat island and on local economy loss during three heat periods in Cluj-Napoca city in the summer of 2015.
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The role of climate adaptation readiness in economic growth and climate change relationship: An analysis of the output/income and productivity/institution channels.

TL;DR: It is found that increases in temperature exert significant negative effect on economic growth and productivity growth, but these effects critically depend on the level of adaptation readiness, and for countries with enhanced adaptation capacity, it is possible for them to see a resurgence in their economic growth after a rise in temperature.
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Evaluating heat extremes in the UK Climate Projections (UKCP18)

TL;DR: In this article, the UK Climate Projections 2018 (UKCP18) are compared to observational (HadUK-Grid) and reanalysis data (ERA5) to quantify model performance at capturing mean, extremes (95th to 99.5th percentiles) and variability in the climate state and heat stress metrics (simplified Wet Bulb Global Temperature, sWBGT; Humidex; Apparent Temperature).
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Trending Questions (1)
What is the cost of loss of productivity due to stress for the economy?

The cost of productivity loss due to heat stress on city economies could range from 0.4% to 9.5% of Gross Value Added, with potential adaptation measures mitigating losses significantly.