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19 de novembro de 2025
The study by Climate Resilience for All, Extreme Heat and the Shrinking Diurnal Range: A Global Evaluation of Oppressive Air Mass Character and Frequency, analyzed weather data over a 30-year period from 1994 to 2024, isolating the two types of weather conditions, or air masses, considered most dangerous for human health: dry tropical (DT) weather, which is hot and dry, and moist tropical (MT) weather which is hot and humid.
Heat exposure has traditionally been measured by exposure to daytime high temperatures and increasing average temperatures. This study points clearly to the urgent need for preventative and responsive actions on extreme heat to explicitly account for and address the rapidly rising threat of hotter nights.
Global, regional, and city level data visualizations can be accessed via this link.
The analysis found:
Increases in nighttime temperatures, and decreases in the gap between daytime highs and nighttime lows across much of the globe
Increases in the frequency of extreme heat days
Before this analysis, we did not know how rapidly nighttime heat has been rising within the most dangerous air masses, said Larry Kalkstein, climatologist, Chief Heat Science Advisor at Climate Resilience for All, and the study’s lead author. It is critical for us to understand how the heat of summerthat sends people to the emergency roomis shifting, and what we are overlooking when we talk about it.
We want this analysis to mobilize city and health leaders to urgently broaden their view of what is a 24-hour heat crisis. This research uncovers a critical blind spot in our understanding of extreme heat, said Kathy Baughman McLeod, CEO of Climate Resilience for All.
High nighttime temperatures prevent the human body from cooling down, increasing risks of heat exhaustion, dehydration, and cardiovascular stress. When sleep is disrupted by heat, the body loses its ability to recover from daytime exposure, heightening the danger of illness and deathespecially for older adults, women, and those living in poorly ventilated housing.
Heat warning systems are focused on high daytime temperatures and currently minimize the impact of overnight temperatures. The study offers guidance and urges health officials and policymakers to integrate these changing patterns into their work and to ramp up regionally targeted heat warning systems that account for the growing probability of multi-day, high-intensity events that offer little nocturnal relief.
About Climate Resilience for All
Climate Resilience for All is a global adaptation NGO dedicated to protecting the health, income, and dignity of women on the frontlines of extreme heat.
Contacts:
Geraldine Henrich-Koenis, geraldine@climateresilience.org
Kelechukwu Iruoma, kelechukwu@climateresilience.org
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