That would be roughly on par with Germany's deaths related to infections contracted in a hospital. That doesn't make it into headlines.
That would be roughly on par with Germany's deaths related to infections contracted in a hospital. That doesn't make it into headlines.
That's just the UK (high latitude), at tempretures lower than current tempretures in Death Valley / Marble Bar.
Give it time for higher tempretures to reach dense urban centres, look to India and equatorial countries that'll experience both high temp and high humidity and you'll see heat exhaustion deaths rise to well past those anglocentric numbers.
The more serious numbers will come from climate related conflict and migration in any case (assuming no change in increasing emmissions, even assuming a flattening to a steady human annual addition).