Workplace Costs and Hazards Amplified by Climate Change

Workplace Costs and Hazards Amplified by Climate Change

Summary
CompaniesProductivity hit seen $2.4 ⁢trillion by⁣ 2030
Worker rights ⁣patchily⁢ enforced
No “one size fits all” workplace⁢ solutions
Sept 7 (Reuters) – As Texas ⁤baked in this summer’s ⁤record temperatures,​ local UPS driver Chris Begley started ​feeling​ unwell before collapsing at a customer’s premises. The 57-year-old’s death in ‌hospital ⁤was announced in late August – just as ‌his trade union was ratifying a deal with UPS ‌on improved ⁢heat‌ protections.
“Chris‍ Begley should still be alive to experience them,” the Teamsters ‍union said in a statement​ of ‍provisions such ‍as a ⁢promise to include air conditioning in ⁤new delivery vans from next year and‍ to retrofit ⁣existing vehicles.
In a statement to‌ local media, UPS (UPS.N) said it was cooperating with⁣ the authorities as they investigated the cause of death. “We train our people to recognize⁤ the symptoms of heat ⁣stress, and ​we respond immediately ​to any request for ​help,”⁢ it ​said.
As⁢ global warming leads to more frequent ⁣spells of extreme ‍heat around the​ world, workers are ‍among⁤ the most​ exposed to serious health risks‌ because ‌their livelihoods​ often‍ depend on ⁢them ⁣carrying on regardless.
At the ‍same time, studies show that productivity starts to be impaired at‍ temperatures above 24-26 degrees Celsius‌ (75-79⁣ degrees Fahrenheit) and, for some tasks, slashed by half from around 33-34C – levels repeatedly exceeded in a year which ​included the ⁤hottest⁢ July on record.
“Unlike ⁤some occupational health and safety ​risks you see a ‍direct impact (from heat) on the health of ⁤workers ⁢and a direct impact on productivity,” said‍ Halshka Graczyk, a specialist on the issue at the International Labour Organization (ILO).
“So does it make ⁢sense⁣ for the‌ employer to keep a job⁤ site running ‍that day if it is⁢ more than ⁢35C and productivity is less than 50%‍ of what they are⁣ expecting?” Graczyk said of an awkward⁤ cost-benefit ​ratio that more workplaces will start ‍to ​face.
WORKER RIGHTS
Even on the optimistic⁣ assumption that the world hits its⁢ Paris Agreement goal of capping warming at 1.5C,⁢ productivity losses will amount‌ to 2.2% of global work hours or‍ $2.4 trillion in output by 2030, the‌ ILO estimates.
Reuters⁢ Graphics
But finding the‍ point⁢ at which employer costs can be minimised without ‌compromising worker welfare​ is all the harder given the lack of clear data, uneven regulation, and the unequal way that workers around the world⁣ will experience⁣ heat stress.
Not surprisingly,⁤ white-collar ⁢workers in air-conditioned offices ⁢will be less ‍affected: the⁤ big impact will remain initially on outdoor workers in sectors​ from construction to agriculture‌ and in ​particular those in the Global ⁤South.
Among the most exposed will be the world’s 170 million migrant workers. ‌Chaya Vaddhanaphuti, ⁤a researcher at⁤ Chiang Mai University‌ in Thailand, said his studies of migrant workers from Myanmar ⁢underlined ⁣their vulnerability.
“These labourers tend to​ display extra stoicism and endurance – partly⁤ because they need to show to their Thai ‌bosses that they can…

Article from www.reuters.com

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