Popis: |
Abstract Southeast Asia (SEA) is experiencing rapid warming, leading to more extreme heatwaves. Sustained compound heatwaves, with high temperatures during day and at night, pose profound threats in highly vulnerable regions, resulting in great stress on society. We estimated the changes in the compound heatwave characteristics and population exposure over SEA at the end of the 21st century based on the model outputs from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6. Results show that the projected compound heatwaves have significant intensified over SEA linked to increasing greenhouse gas emissions. Contemporary younger generations will face more potential risks than their parents' generation. A child born in the 2010s will experience 1,000 discrete heatwaves in their lifetime, a threefold increase compared with the 1980s. Climate change and population growth combine to drive increased population exposure. The climate effect accounts for 125% in the 0–24‐year‐old cohort, whereas the interaction effect accounts for 85% in the 75+ age group. The relative importance of effects evolves dynamically across age groups, gradually shifting from a predominance of climate effects to a synergy of the climate and population effects. Significant regional inequalities exist in the increased population exposure over SEA. The largest increase occurs in Indonesia, where the aggregate exposure ranges from 45 billion person‐days under the SSP1‐2.6 scenario to 81 and 108 billion person‐days, respectively, in the higher SSP2‐4.5 and SSP5‐8.5 scenarios. The study emphasizes the need for the SEA countries to focus on heat‐stress adaptation strategies, while also working toward fulfilling emission reduction commitments. |