Effects of climate change-related heat stress on labor productivity in South Korea

This study assessed the potential impact of heat stress on labor productivity in South Korea; as such, stress is expected to increase due to climate change. To quantify the future loss of labor productivity, we used the relationship between the wet-bulb globe temperature and work-rest cycles with re...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biometeorology 2018-12, Vol.62 (12), p.2119-2129
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Seung-Wook, Lee, Kyoungmi, Lim, Byunghwan
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container_title International journal of biometeorology
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creator Lee, Seung-Wook
Lee, Kyoungmi
Lim, Byunghwan
description This study assessed the potential impact of heat stress on labor productivity in South Korea; as such, stress is expected to increase due to climate change. To quantify the future loss of labor productivity, we used the relationship between the wet-bulb globe temperature and work-rest cycles with representative concentration pathways (RCPs) 4.5 and 8.5 as the climate change scenarios. If only climate factors are considered, then future labor productivity is expected to decline in most regions from the middle of the twenty-first century onwards (2041–2070). From the late twenty-first century onwards, the productivity of heavy outdoor work could decline by 26.1% from current levels under the RCP 8.5 climate scenario. Further analysis showed that regional differences in labor characteristics and the working population had noteworthy impacts on future labor productivity losses. The heat stress caused by climate change thus has a potentially substantial negative impact on outdoor labor productivity in South Korea.
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subjects 21st century
Animal Physiology
Biological and Medical Physics
Biophysics
Climate Change
Climate change scenarios
Climate effects
Climatic analysis
Earth and Environmental Science
Efficiency
Environment
Environmental Health
Forecasting
Heat stress
Heat Stress Disorders - epidemiology
Heat tolerance
Hot Temperature
Humans
Labor
Labor economics
Labor productivity
Meteorology
Occupational Exposure
Original Paper
Plant Physiology
Productivity
Regional analysis
Republic of Korea - epidemiology
Workload
title Effects of climate change-related heat stress on labor productivity in South Korea
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