Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - August 3, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
A4
● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
FRONT AND CENTRE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2024
Governments are ramping up strategies to address the devastating impacts of extreme heat
TAKING ON A ‘SILENT KILLER’
I
T’S only halfway through sum-
mer but the world has already
experienced its hottest day ever
— twice.
On July 21, the global average
temperature nudged past the all-time
record of 17.08 C set a year ago. The
next day was even hotter, reaching
17.16 C, where it hovered for another
day.
Before 2023, the hottest day on
record was 16.8 C set in August 2016.
As of July, that temperature has been
exceeded 59 times in just over a year.
July also marked the 13th consecu-
tive month to break global tempera-
ture records.
“We are not prepared,” United
Nations Secretary General Antonio
Guterres said in a call to action last
week urging governments to address
the threat of extreme heat. “Deadly
heat is becoming commonplace.”
Extreme heat is among the world’s
most deadly natural disasters, killing
nearly 500,000 people worldwide annu-
ally. In Canada and the United States,
extreme heat kills more people than
any other weather event.
But unlike other natural disasters,
it is a largely invisible emergency: it
comes on slowly, targets vulnerable
populations and kills behind closed
doors.
As a result, “policies to address
extreme heat so far remain scattered,
disjointed and underfunded,” Guterres
said in the UN report.
According to Manitoba Public Health
officials, messaging and education
is critical in keeping the community
— especially vulnerable populations
— safe.
As Manitobans sweat out a late July
heat wave, Public Health released a
bulletin advising outdoor workers and
their employers to take extra precau-
tions and be aware of the signs of heat
stress.
But a rise in frequency and severity
of heat waves in Canada is prompting
a new perception of extreme risks
among policymakers and the public
alike.
“It’s become rightly recognized as
something much more serious and
potentially devastating,” said Sarah
Miller, adaptation research lead at the
Canadian Climate Institute.
“We no longer see heat waves as
something fun that happens in the
summer where you go to the beach
to cool off. We’re starting to take it
seriously.”
● ● ●
IT’S estimated nearly 500,000 people
globally died as a result of extreme
heat each year from 2000 to 2019.
According to an analysis of Canada’s
disaster database, which tracks the im-
pacts of severe weather events stretch-
ing back to 1900, heat waves caused
more than 2,000 deaths between 1900
and 2020, representing 40 per cent of all
natural disaster fatalities in that time.
That figure doesn’t include the
2021 heat dome that killed 619 people
in British Columbia — the deadliest
natural disaster in Canadian history.
Manitoba currently does not collect
data on heat-related mortality.
“Termed the ‘silent killer,’ extreme
heat dwarfs the impact of more visible
weather hazards,” Guterres said.
Older adults are most at risk, with
the UN reporting an 85 per cent in-
crease in heat deaths among the demo-
graphic in recent years, compared to
the early 2000s. Children, people with
pre-existing health conditions, em-
ployees in outdoor or poorly ventilated
workplaces and athletes also face more
heat-stress risks.
But according to the World Health
Organization’s Global Heat Health
Information Network, almost all
deaths directly due to excess heat can
be prevented provided governments
develop action plans and early-warning
systems.
As Miller at the Canadian Climate
Institute explained, timely heat warn-
ings are key.
“One of the best practices is clear
and consistent heat-warning systems
that clearly differentiate between heat
warnings and extreme-heat emergen-
cies,” she said.
The goal is to help the public un-
derstand when a heat wave is severe
— for example, when temperatures are
far higher than normal, don’t fall at
night and stick around for a prolonged
period of time — “all of which really
ratchet up the severity of health impli-
cations,” Miller said.
● ● ●
THOUGH it does not differentiate
between heat warnings and heat
emergencies like Ontario and British
Columbia, Manitoba has had a public
health plan for extreme heat for more
than a decade, Jennifer Chiarotto,
the province’s executive director of
population and public health, said in
an interview.
That plan was refreshed this year
and included in a Heat Alert and
Response System guide, which makes
recommendations to government
departments, municipalities and other
agencies.
In Manitoba, as in other provinces,
Environment and Climate Change
Canada takes the lead on early heat
warnings, medical officer of health
Peter Benoit explained. The provinces
work with their federal counterparts
to track forecasts and be on alert for
weather that exceeds the extreme-heat
threshold.
Those thresholds differ across
jurisdictions. Extreme heat warnings
are issued in southern Manitoba when
forecasts predict two days with either
daytime highs above 32 C and night-
time lows above 16 C, or a humidex
over 38 C. The threshold is a few
degrees lower in northern Manitoba,
where temperatures tend to be cooler.
Once a heat alert is triggered,
the province puts out messaging to
residents, municipalities, health-care
facilities and other agencies advising
the public — particularly vulnerable
populations — to take precautions and
put localized heat response plans in
motion.
“We want people to be cool and have
access to the tools that they need for
that — we want people to be able to
drink water, attend green spaces and
so forth,” Chiarotto said. “The function
is very much focused on prevention.”
● ● ●
UNLIKE other natural disasters, heat
does discriminate.
“Heat targets the most vulnerable in
our society,” Peter Kimbell, an Envi-
ronment and Climate Change Canada
warning preparedness meteorologist,
said in an interview.
Hot days are even hotter in urban
centres, where human-driven activi-
ties, such as vehicles, transportation
networks and mechanical systems,
combined with the heat-absorbing
properties of asphalt and pavement
can increase air temperatures by 3 C
in the day and up to 12 C at night.
That leaves low-income neighbour-
hoods, particularly those with little
tree cover and green space, to expe-
rience the worst of what’s called a
heat-island effect.
A 2023 Statistics Canada study found
less than half of those living on the
Prairies have access to air condition-
ing, compared to a national average
of 61 per cent. Among racialized and
low-income groups, 37 per cent had ac-
cess to air conditioning. For non-home-
owners, access fell to 35.5 per cent.
“It’s seniors in apartments without
air conditioning who are most vulnera-
ble,” Kimbell said.
In Winnipeg, emergency manage-
ment co-ordinator Mike Olczyk said
response plans are tailored to protect
the most vulnerable.
Since 2022, the city has installed a
handful of hydration stations — effec-
tively water bottle filling stations — in
high-need areas. This year, the number
of stations was increased from three
to eight.
Several community centres open
their doors to provide respite, bottled
water and information to help residents
identify heat-related health symptoms.
Other public facilities, such as librar-
ies, swimming pools and spray pads,
can also offer relief.
The city worked with an extreme
weather response group made up of
shelters and other community agen-
cies serving vulnerable populations to
decide where to locate hydration and
cooling stations.
“We try to get as close as we can to
some of the shelters,” Olczyk said.
The city’s emergency response also
focuses on helping residents under-
stand the risks of extreme weather,
urging people to check in on family,
friends and neighbours who might
live alone or lack air conditioning, or
encouraging parents to keep their chil-
dren and pets hydrated and out of the
sun during the hottest hours of the day.
● ● ●
CANADA is beginning to treat
extreme heat with the same urgency
it does other natural disasters, Miller
said, noting emergencies such as
floods are much more dramatic, not
only due to the images they produce,
but also in terms of financial impacts
to individuals and governments.
“It’s easier to talk about the severity
of those disasters and then plan for
them … I think just because of the
visibility of those disasters and the
massive price tag attached, whereas
the impacts of extreme heat are pri-
marily on people’s health.”
And more specifically, on the health
of vulnerable people — often in private
or at home.
“Those factors combine to make ex-
treme heat more of an invisible emer-
gency,” Miller said. “That has hindered
the flow of funding and the visibility of
it as a disaster.”
But the perception is starting to
change.
“Economic growth is reduced,
labour productivity diminished, water
supplies exhausted, energy demand
increased, precious crops decimated,
school days missed, key infrastructure
degraded and homes made uninhabit-
able, all of which puts more pressure
on already-stretched public services
and may overwhelm humanitarian
assistance,” the UN said in its call to
action on extreme heat.
Labour productivity drops as the
mercury starts to climb above 24 C,
according to the UN. Beyond 34 C,
productivity is cut in half. The Interna-
tional Labour Organization estimates
the economic losses from heat stress
at work is expected to rise to US$2.4
trillion by 2030 — equivalent to losing
80 million full-time jobs.
WorkSafe BC found heat-related
workplace injuries increased 180 per
cent during the 2021 heat dome, includ-
ing a significant increase in claims
from indoor workers such as kitchen
and warehouse staff. Many workplaces
closed or cut hours, predominantly
those without working ventilation
or air conditioning. Ten of 12 public
school districts in the lower mainland
closed. It’s estimated workers lost
more than $205 million in income.
JULIA-SIMONE RUTGERS
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
Madison and her mom Priscilla stop to fill up a water bottle at one of eight hydration stations the city has installed in recent years. The stations are part of the city’s response to extreme heat concerns.
● CONTINUED ON A6
;