Climate change has doubled global heatwaves - Africa faces rising health risks, food insecurity, and economic strain from extreme heat events.
A global review of extreme heat has found that between May 2024 and May 2025, nearly half the world’s people (49% or 4 billion) suffered through an extra 30 days of temperatures that were hotter than those experienced 90% of the time between 1991 and 2020.
Scientists from World Weather Attribution, the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, and Climate Central found that climate change had also doubled the number of heatwaves in the world. The research also identified 67 extreme heat events that were influenced by climate change. The Conversation Africa spoke to climate scientist Joyce Kimutai, one of the authors of the report.What’s the link between climate change and heatwaves?
Climate change modifies extreme weather events. In other words, it increases the intensity and likelihood of heatwaves and other extreme weather events. It doesn’t cause them; extreme weather events have always happened. But it does make heatwaves much worse and more harmful. Many people still don’t appreciate the danger of heatwaves. We call them “silent killers” because they often cause serious harm without the dramatic visuals of storms or floods. Heatwaves can lead to dehydration, heatstroke, and even death – especially among vulnerable groups like the elderly, children, and those with pre-existing health conditions. For example, our study focused on a heatwave that saw temperatures rise above 45°C in the Sahel (the semiarid region of western and north-central Africa). During this heatwave, Mali recorded temperatures of close to 50°C. We found that this heatwave was 1.5°C hotter and ten times more likely to occur due to climate change. To some people, 1.5°C might not sound like much, but it really can be the difference between life and death for vulnerable people.How did you determine the extreme heat events that were driven by climate change?
We used attribution science methodology and climate modelling to calculate how much heat climate change has added to an extreme temperature event. In other words, we used a system we invented, known as the Climate Shift Index system, to calculate the number of extreme heat days that would have occurred if humans had never caused climate change. We then compared that to the number of extreme heat days actually happening. This allowed us to count how many extreme heat days were added by climate change in the past year. It also allows us to predict how heat waves will grow more frequent and intense unless greenhouse emissions from major polluting companies who burn fossil fuels are cut drastically. To see how climate change affected temperatures over the past year, we first figured out what counted as unusually hot. We based this on the temperatures of the hottest 10% of days from 1991 to 2020. Then we counted how many days between 1 May 2024 and 1 May 2025 were hotter than that level. Finally, we estimated how many of those days were caused by climate change.