Quantifying the impact of future extreme heat on the outdoor work sector
in the United States
Abstract
Outdoor workers perform critical societal functions, often despite
higher-than-average on-the-job risks and below-average pay. Climate
change is expected to increase the frequency of days when it is too hot
to safely work outdoors, compounding risks to workers and placing new
stressors on the personal, local, state, and federal economies that
depend on them. After quantifying the number of outdoor workers in the
contiguous United States and their median earnings, we couple heat-based
work reduction recommendations from the US Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention with an analysis of hourly weather station data to
develop novel algorithms for calculating the annual number of unsafe
workdays due to extreme heat. We apply these algorithms to projections
of the frequency of extreme heat days to quantify the exposure of the
outdoor workforce to extreme heat and the associated earnings at risk
under different greenhouse gas emissions mitigation scenarios and, for
the first time, different adaptation measures. With a trajectory of
modest greenhouse gas emissions reductions (RCP4.5), outdoor worker
exposure to extreme heat would triple that of the late 20th century
baseline by midcentury, and earnings at risk would reach an estimated
$39.3 billion annually. By late century with that same trajectory,
exposure would increase four-fold compared to the baseline with an
estimated $49.2 billion in annual earnings at risk. Losses are
considerably higher with a limited-mitigation trajectory (RCP8.5). While
universal adoption of two specific adaptation measures in conjunction
could reduce future economic risks by roughly 90%, practical
limitations to their adoption suggest that emissions mitigation policies
will be critical for ensuring the wellbeing and livelihoods of outdoor
workers in a warming climate.