Up to a third of the projected global population of 9bn could be exposed to temperatures on a par with the hottest parts of the Sahara, according to research by scientists from China, US and Europe on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Under the most extreme scenario, the southern US states would become much hotter, particularly those that border the Gulf of Mexico.
Central America would bear the brunt of the increase, with up to 20m people living in mean annual temperatures of 29C on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Big regions of Canada and Alaska would experience warmer conditions by 2070.
These areas are now largely uninhabited and projected to remain that way without factoring in migration on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Large areas of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, along with surrounding countries Peru, Colombia and Venezuela, would be virtually unliveable.
About 59m people would be affected under the most extreme scenario on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Europe is the only continent to avoid mean annual temperatures exceeding 29C. But large areas of Scandinavia, eastern Russia and countries bordering the Mediterranean could still expect to see temperatures increase by up to 5C under the worst-case scenario on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Africa’s population is predicted to experience a population explosion in all the shared socio-economic pathway scenarios, doubling to almost 2.4bn people.
About 80% of Nigeria’s predicted population of about 477m would suffer from extreme temperatures on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Asia’s population is predicted to swell to more than 5bn, and a large number of countries would face mean annual temperatures in excess of 29C.
Worst affected would be India, with more than half its expected population of 1.6bn facing extreme heat on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Almost all of the United Arab Emirates and Cambodia would become nearly unliveable, including the heavily populated areas of south Vietnam and eastern Pakistan on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
Oceania’s extreme heat would be confined to the largely unpopulated areas of Papua New Guinea and northern Australia, with the majority of Australia’s population remaining predominantly situated along the south and eastern coastline on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
But rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could halve the number of people exposed to such hot conditions.
As #COP26 rolls on, you can dive into the research on each continent here: on.ft.com/3BEyaiC
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Four FT pieces were recognised at the 2023 Awards for Editorial Excellence by the Society of Publishers in Asia. Read the winning works 👇 (1/5)
A shortage of heirs jeopardises Japan's family enterprises and threatens its economy. This engaging read by @Urbandirt, @SugiuraEri and @slodek earned an award for excellence in arts and culture reporting (2/5) ft.com/content/dc5c19…
@Urbandirt's commentary on rising resentment among Japan's young workers towards unproductive older colleagues received an honourable mention (3/5) ft.com/content/4012c8…
New investigation: thirteen women who worked for Odey Asset Management or had dealings with its founder Crispin Odey told the FT that he abused or harassed them.
The incidents, which occurred between 1998 and 2021, included masturbating on a female entrepreneur after a business meeting and forcing a friend’s hand on to his penis ft.com/content/e5d143…twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The FT once described Crispin Odey as ‘a large puppy in a pinstripe suit’. For three decades he has reigned over London’s hedge fund scene.
At his firm, once one of Europe’s largest hedge fund companies, he found many of his targets ft.com/content/e5d143…
🧵'Dare to fight' — Xi Jinping used the phrase recently to sum up China's new foreign policy. We break down Beijing's bid to shape the world around its own interests 👇(1/7) on.ft.com/42T0VXA
Xi has adopted a more assertive stance on foreign relations in the past decade, militarising artificial islands in the disputed South China Sea and becoming more aggressive towards Taiwan (2/7) on.ft.com/42T0VXA
Since 2013, China has sent more diplomatic missions to the Middle East than the west. This month, it convinced Iran and Saudi Arabia to resume diplomatic ties after a seven-year rift (3/7) on.ft.com/42T0VXA
🧵UBS executives have started trying to sell investors on the benefits of its $3.25bn shotgun marriage with Credit Suisse. Here's what the Swiss bank might look like after it fully takes over its defunct rival 👇 (1/6) on.ft.com/40lq9M8
🏦 After the takeover, UBS would become the second-largest private bank in the world after Morgan Stanley, with $3.4bn of wealth management assets (2/6) on.ft.com/40lq9M8
👥 If UBS holds on to Credit Suisse's most valuable asset, its domestic bank, thousands of jobs could be threatened as branches are closed and duplicate administrative roles removed (3/6) on.ft.com/40lq9M8
🧵 How is China's economy doing? We break down Beijing's first comprehensive overview of economic activity since it ended its zero-Covid rules in three charts 👇 (1/5) on.ft.com/3ZZiEdQ
🛍️ China's retail sales grew 3.5% year on year in the first two months of 2023, compared with declines in the previous three months (2/5) on.ft.com/3ZZiEdQ
🚘 But there were some weak spots in the positive retail figures. China's car sales contracted 9.4% year on year in January and February, compared with growth of 4.6% in December (3/5) on.ft.com/3ZZiEdQ