Simon Lloyd
Postdoctoral researcher at ISGlobal specialising in climate and health
I’m glad to see this well executed paper drawing much needed attention to these important challenges. As the authors note, it’s always necessary to make assumptions when projecting potential futures. For instance, it wasn’t possible to account for the huge influence of the rapid urbanization occurring in many parts of the world: this is concentrating people in large cities, very often in slums (also called ‘informal settlements’) and this potentially puts older people at even higher risk, including to the impacts of heat. This means, as with all studies of possible futures, that it’s not the exact numbers that are important, but rather their overall magnitudes. Here we see that in all the futures considered, the older populations facing high risk are large: the paper makes it clear that we need to take action that accounts for both climate change and ageing now.
Something worth noting is that the study classifies people as ‘old’ based on the number of years they have already lived; that is, their chronological age. This may inadvertently downplay the potential benefits of futures that give high priority to mitigating climate change and sustainable development. Sustainability isn’t just about the environment: it’s also about social change that tries to ensure all people are able to flourish and have good health. In this case, even though the size of older populations may rise substantially, these people are likely to have lower susceptibility to the impacts of heat. In other words, in a sustainable future, a person aged, say, 80 years old, is likely to be less vulnerable than an 80-year-old in a less sustainable future. Similarly, the vulnerability of an 80-year-old is likely to differ by country and over time. These differences are missed in this analysis, but can be accounted for by using a different measure of age, known as prospective age. This is based not on the number of years already lived, but on how many years someone can still expect to live: as longevity rises, people of a given chronological age are effectively ‘younger’. If this were accounted for in the current analysis, I’d expect that the benefits of not only minimising climate change, but also of continually improving the everyday lives of all people across their entire lives, would be more evident.