HomeNewsEnvironmentWhy 40°C is bearable in a desert but lethal in the tropics

Why 40°C is bearable in a desert but lethal in the tropics

Being deprived of shade exposes the body to heat from direct sunlight, while higher humidity means that the rate of evaporation from our skin will decrease.

June 04, 2023 / 09:53 IST
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The body loses some heat directly to the air around us and some through breathing, but most heat is lost through sweating; as when the sweat on our skin evaporates, it takes in energy from our skin and the air around us in the form of latent heat. (Photo: Mary Taylor via Pexels)
The body loses some heat directly to the air around us and some through breathing, but most heat is lost through sweating; as when the sweat on our skin evaporates, it takes in energy from our skin and the air around us in the form of latent heat. (Photo: Mary Taylor via Pexels)

This year, even before the northern hemisphere hot season began, temperature records were being shattered. Spain for instance saw temperatures in April (38.8°C) that would be out of the ordinary even at the peak of summer. South and South-East Asia in particular were hammered by a very persistent heatwave, and all-time record temperatures were experienced in countries such as Vietnam and Thailand (44°C and 45°C, respectively). In Singapore, the more modest record was also broken, as temperatures hit 37°C. And in China, Shanghai just recorded its highest May temperature for over a century at 36.7°C.

We know that climate change makes these temperatures more likely, but also that heatwaves of similar magnitudes can have very different impacts depending on factors like humidity or how prepared an area is for extreme heat. So, how does a humid country like Vietnam cope with a 44°C heatwave, and how does it compare with dry heat, or a less hot heatwave in even-more-humid Singapore?

Weather and physiology


The recent heatwave in South-East Asia may well be remembered for its level of heat-induced stress on the body. Heat stress is mostly caused by temperature, but other weather-related factors such as humidity, radiation and wind are also important.

Also read: This Indian city is the most humid in the world

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Our bodies gain heat from the air around us, from the sun, or from our own internal processes such as digestion and exercise. In response to this, our bodies must lose some heat. Some of this we lose directly to the air around us and some through breathing. But most heat is lost through sweating, as when the sweat on the surface of our skin evaporates it takes in energy from our skin and the air around us in the form of latent heat.


How humans heat up and cool down. Taken from Buzan and Huber (2020) Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Author provided