Extreme Temperature Diary- Thursday November 6th, 2025/Main Topic: Extreme Heat Now Kills One Person Every Minute Across the Globe

‘A devastating global audit’ shows how climate change is undermining the health of millions.Extreme heat now kills one person every minute, according to a sweeping new report by the British medical journal The Lancet.grist.org/health/lance…#Climate #Health #PublicHealth #Heat

Grist (@grist.org) 2025-11-03T15:03:21.624Z

How climate change is undermining the health of millions worldwide | Grist

‘A devastating global audit’ shows how climate change is undermining the health of millions

Extreme heat now kills one person every minute, according to a sweeping new report by the British medical journal The Lancet.

Ayhan Mehmet / Anadolu / Getty Images

Zoya Teirstein Senior Staff Writer

This story is part of the Grist series Vital Signs, exploring the ways climate change affects your health. This reporting initiative is made possible thanks to support from the Wellcome Trust.

As world leaders prepare to meet for the 30th annual United Nations climate change conference, or COP30, in northern Brazil later this month, a new report has found that climate change is already killing millions of people every year. The “Countdown on Health and Climate Change,” which is compiled by researchers around the world, has been published every year since 2015 by the British medical journal The Lancet.

The missives have grown increasingly dire over that decade. In 2020, the report warned that climate change threatened to “undermine the past 50 years of gains in public health.” Five years later, the same document suggests that this erosion is well underway.

“Climate change is increasingly destabilising the planetary systems and environmental conditions on which human life depends,” the countdown’s authors wrote.

Extreme heat now kills one person every minute, according to the report, noting that the rate of heat-related deaths has risen 23 percent since the 1990s — a trend the authors attribute in large part to planetary warming caused by the burning of fossil fuels. The vast majority of the heatwave days endured worldwide between 2020 and 2024 would not have occurred in the absence of climate change.

But it’s not just extreme heat: The risk of death due to inhaling dangerous particulate matter in wildfire smoke and the spread of infectious diseases such as mosquito-borne dengue fever are also on the rise. The number of deaths linked to wildfire smoke inhalation in 2024 was 36 percent higher than the baseline established from 2003 to 2012. More severe droughts and heatwaves spurred by rising temperatures were also connected to 124 million more cases of moderate or severe food insecurity in 2023, compared to a baseline average from 1981 to 2010.

In sum, the report paints a picture of populations ill-equipped to cope with the shifting environmental parameters of a changing climate. “This Lancet report is a devastating global health audit,” said Harjeet Singh, founding director of a nature advocacy group called the Satat Sampada Climate Foundation, who was not involved in the assessment. “Our fossil fuel addiction is killing us by the millions.” 

Identifying the extent to which any isolated factor affects human health is no easy feat. A person’s wellbeing is linked to myriad behavioral, environmental, and social threads. In the past few decades, researchers all over the world have sought to isolate the role climate change plays in amplifying existing health trends and spurring the movement of disease. The process is not unlike how climate scientists seek to understand how the qualities of a particular hurricane or drought can be attributed to above-average sea surface or land temperatures. 

But because humans are so variable, attributing health impacts to planetary warming is an imperfect science. Reporting from the frontlines of climate hot spots in the world’s richest countries shows that illness and death that could be linked to climate change — heat stroke in Arizona emergency rooms during record-breaking heatwaves, for example — are rarely recorded as such. Conversely, top-down efforts to calculate the extent to which climate change may be influencing the spread of diseases such as tick-borne Lyme potentially overstate the effects of climate change by inadvertently underweighing the effects of urban sprawl, outdoor recreation, and other factors that put people in contact with ticks. 

The difficulty of separating signal from noise is what makes The Lancet’s annual report so important; it’s one of the only global efforts to make sense of the wide landscape of research at the intersection of climate and health. It tracks how 20 “health indicators” such as air pollution, food insecurity, days of extreme precipitation and drought, among others, have changed over the preceding 12 months. The 2025 report found that 13 of the 20 indicators tracked have grown more severe. 

As world leaders arrive in Brazil next month, much of the momentum for coordinated worldwide action to reduce emissions appears to be waning. Fossil fuel giants such as BP and ExxonMobil have reneged on their climate commitments. At President Donald Trump’s direction, the United States, the world’s biggest historical emitter of greenhouse gases, has begun the process of withdrawing from the Paris agreement and the World Health Organization.

“Paradoxically, as the need for decisive health-protective action grows, some world leaders are disregarding the growing body of scientific evidence on health and climate change,” the report’s authors wrote in a thinly veiled critique of Trump. “There is no time left for further delay.”

EUROPE HISTORIC NOVEMBER WARMTHAn exceptional warm week is kicking off with widespread abnormal warmth allover Europe,except for Central MediterraneanHundreds of records of November warm nights can fall with MINIMUMS locally >15C in UK and >13C in Scandinavia,typical of June!

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T10:21:03.921Z

EXTRAORDINARY HEAT IN CANARY ISLANDS 35CTemperatures up to 34.9C at San Cristobal, minimums >23C: Hotter than JulyMany records fell including 32.5 Tenerife Norte 600m aslInsanity in MOROCCO with 38Cand many records: 34C on the coast at NouasseurFull summer in November !

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T15:43:56.730Z

October 2025 was the first colder than average month since April 2023 in Adriatic Croatia BUT Zadar managed to close at par with the 1991/2020 average,so it holds a streak of 30 consecutive month without a below average month.Never happened in European history.Map by DHMZ

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T12:19:06.910Z

Endless record heat in INDIANovember Highest Minimum in history:28.2 Thanavur27.7 Chennai APand many more..Record heat will continue the whole week.

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T05:44:49.588Z

More late summer heat West of the Rockies,parts of Canada and Mexico.And the Caribbean sauna with hot and humid conditions resembling those of Southeast AsiaMINIMUM 27.0 Santa Marta ,COLOMBIA November hottest nightmax. 34.5 Sabana de la Mar DOMINICAN REPUBLICNovember record

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T01:15:59.535Z

Hottest November day on record in Denver – 83° for a high:🌡️ Breaks daily (78°) and monthly (81°) temp records🌡️ Latest 83° on record in Denver (prev: Oct. 29)🌡️ Go Broncos #COwx

Chris Bianchi (@bianchiweather.bsky.social) 2025-11-02T22:32:22.684Z

As warming increases, we are already accelerating past some well-known #climate tipping points – points of no return – while others are approaching fast. These tipping points mark critical forks in the road. Until now most changes have been manageable, but… 1/

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2025-11-03T14:16:24.754Z

Hektoria Glacier retreated by more than 8km (5 miles) in just two months in late 2022 – the first modern example of a process where the front of a glacier resting on the seabed rapidly destabilises, leading to much faster sea-level rise#climatewww.bbc.co.uk/news/article…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T09:39:07.468Z

Michael Mann to Bill Gates: You can’t reboot the planet if you crash it#climatethebulletin.org/2025/10/you-…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T09:50:51.113Z

As I am one of the climate scientists he is referring to here – and I am a scientist who decided to dedicate her life to working on climate precisely because of how unjustly it disproportionately impacts the poor and vulnerable – let me clarify my rationale and thoughts below. 🧵

Katharine Hayhoe (@katharinehayhoe.com) 2025-11-04T17:10:44.495Z

How to fight #climate change without the US: a guide to global action www.nature.com/articles/d41…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T09:44:45.660Z

Only 3% of international climate aid going to transitioning communities: ‘This is absurd’www.theguardian.com/environment/…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T09:42:12.011Z

An alpine plant could hold the key to its survival in a steadily warming climate. ETH Zurich researchers have identified the origin of two particular ancient gene variants in the plant that control its flowering time. @usyseth.bsky.social ethz.ch/en/news-and-…

ETH Zurich (@ethz.ch) 2025-11-03T09:41:07.687Z

For more on this, check out the essay I wrote for Astronomy magazine (yes, really!) www.astronomy.com/science/solv…

Katharine Hayhoe (@katharinehayhoe.com) 2025-11-04T17:18:19.361Z

If we don’t fix the climate, pollution, and nature crises, we can’t fix anything. They are already actively amplifying poverty, hunger, and division. They are what stand between all of us, regardless of geography or ideology, and the better future we all seek. That's why I'm convinced that …

Katharine Hayhoe (@katharinehayhoe.com) 2025-11-04T17:17:01.928Z

Can’t say I remember a more impressive early cold season blast!! Early next week models advertise temps tumble 20 plus degrees below norm in the East, w/ freezing temps in Deep South, 30s/40s overtaking north & central Florida. Meantime snow flakes will fly across the Great Lakes and Northeast

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T13:23:52.610Z

Primary energy fallacy.medium.com/@jan.rosenow…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T13:17:11.757Z

Baseload power is functionally extinctre100.eng.anu.edu.au/2025/04/22/b…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T10:17:29.811Z

100% Renewable Energy Group#Australia #Clilmate #Renewables re100.eng.anu.edu.au

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T10:30:44.185Z

Daniele Visioni and I explain our concerns about Stardust and the commercialization of climate engineering in Technology Review:

David Keith (@davidkeith.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T14:54:19.000Z

Australians to get at least three hours a day of free solar power – even if they don’t have #solar panels.www.theguardian.com/australia-ne…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-03T23:55:15.200Z

In @springsproject.bsky.social we study the connection between climate change and health. It's important to see the big picture and avoid being too narrow. Most things are affdcted by our climate: agriculture, energy, health, commerce, immigration/refugees, nature, transport, recreation, security,..

Rasmus E. Benestad (@brasmus.bsky.social) 2025-11-04T17:52:50.799Z

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