Workers in the US, UK and Australia could miss up to 33 days of work a year with HEAT STRESS as climate change warms the planet 4C by 2100
- High temperatures knock 3.5 days of work a year off the average employee
- Now scientists warn this number is poised to rise ten-fold
- Workers in developing countries are set to lose as many as 94 days a year
Workers in the US, UK and Australia could miss up to 33 days of work a year thanks to global warming, a new study shows.
High temperatures already knock 3.5 days of work a year off the average employee as a result of 'heat stress', which covers any time off triggered by excessive heat.
Now scientists warn this number is poised to rise ten-fold as climate change hikes global temperatures over the next century.
Workers in developing countries are set to lose as many as 94 days a year, with nations in Southeast Asia most severely affected.

Workers in the US, UK and Australia could miss up to 33 days of work a year thanks to global warming, a new study shows. Pictured is the worldwide pattern of heat-related loss of work productivity (in days) for 2016, based on an online survey with 4043 valid samples
Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences analysed how many sicks days were caused by high temperatures in 2016.
They found that the average worker in developed countries such as the UK and US missed around 3.5 working days a year with heat stress.
This rises to 6.6 days in the developing world, where luxuries that offset the effects of a heat wave such as air conditioning are limited.
Researchers say the number of working days missed due to heat stress is set to rise under all four of the main climate-change scenarios set out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
If the worst-case scenario of a 4C rise by 2100 is realised, people in the developed world will miss 33 days a year and those in the developing world will miss 94.

Countries in Southeast Asia in a 1.5C-warming world would suffer the same loss as the developed countries would in a 4C-warming world, researchers found (stock image)
Countries in Southeast Asia in a 1.5C-warming world would suffer the same loss as the developed countries would in a 4C-warming world, researchers found.
Researchers made the findings by synthesising 4,363 responses to a global online survey in 2016.
'Heat waves surely impact more seriously the developing countries in general, but our study quantitatively estimated how much heatwaves would reduce the productivity and identified the most vulnerable regions over the world,' said YU Shuang from the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
'Our results call for attention to the need of adaptation to increasing heatwaves by improving protective infrastructure especially for the developing regions in the Belt and Road.'
The study is the most extensive global survey about the effect of stress on heat-related work productivity loss currently available.
Most watched News videos
- Harry and Meghan evacuate in New Zealand due to a fire
- Police dispatch audio reveals horror of synagogue massacre
- Archive footage of the Leicester City chairman's helicopter landing on pitch
- SPOOKY! Incredible shoes made to look like human skin
- Harry and Meghan celebrate 125 anniversary of women's suffrage
- Harry and Meghan receive hongi at welcome ceremony in New Zealand
- Emergency services on scene of crash that killed three
- Adorable toddler does perfect rendition of Bohemian Rhapsody
- Glenn plays football with Paul moments before collapsing
- Debris of Indonesian Boeing 737 floating in water after crashing
- Prince Harry and Meghan Markle depart Sydney for New Zealand
- Hundreds of people gather in Wellington to meet Harry and Meghan
-
Italian father, 52, found 'suffering from memory loss' in...
-
Hiding in plain sight! Holidaymaker snaps a magnificent...
-
Photographer who captured stunning Yosemite proposal has...
-
'Stranded motorist' is arrested for shooting dead a Navy...
-
Trump renews attack on media as 'true Enemy of the...
-
Parents warned to be on the lookout for methamphetamine...
-
Farm worker, 20, killed when she was dragged into...
-
'We are starting a new chapter': Megyn Kelly is replaced...
-
REVEALED: MAGABomber married a fellow stripper while he...
-
Married detective, 53, 'abused his rank to pressurise 21...
-
North Carolina high school student dies after being shot...
-
Frightful costume! Woman's zombie Halloween outfit...
-
ISIS bomb maker blows himself up while constructing...
-
Schoolgirl, nine, dresses up as her idol Mo Salah for...
-
Trump tells caravan of immigrants 'this is an invasion -...
-
Devastated father who lost his wife and two sons in an...
-
Sir Philip Green 'stood behind executive and snipped off...
-
McDonald's gunman is killed by armed customer, who was...