ASSAf's Landmark Consensus Study Highlights Urgent Climate-Health Crisis
The Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf), the national academy dedicated to advancing science for societal benefit, has released a pivotal consensus study titled Climate Change and Extreme Heat: Strengthening Resilience and Adaptive Capacity in the Southern African Development Community (SADC). Funded by the Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (DSTI), this report positions extreme heat as the defining climate-health threat across Southern Africa. Led by Professor Jerome Amir Singh as chairperson of the expert panel, the study draws on multidisciplinary expertise from academics in Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, South Africa, and Zimbabwe.
Extreme heat, characterized by prolonged periods of high temperatures often exceeding 35°C combined with high humidity, acts as an 'integrator hazard.' This means it amplifies multiple interconnected risks, from drought and wildfires to air pollution and strained water and energy systems. In the SADC region, where 19 of the world's 20 hottest years have occurred since 2000, these events are now five times more frequent, intersecting with vulnerabilities like rapid urbanization, informal economies, and overburdened health systems.
South African universities played a central role in this consensus-building process. Researchers from institutions such as the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), University of Cape Town (UCT), and University of Pretoria (UP) contributed evidence from ongoing studies, emphasizing the need for localized data to inform policy.
Understanding Extreme Heat's Toll on Human Health
Extreme heat triggers a cascade of physiological responses as the body struggles to maintain core temperature around 37°C through sweating and vasodilation. When wet-bulb temperatures— a measure combining heat and humidity—approach 35°C, human survival becomes limited without intervention, as evaporative cooling fails.
Health effects span acute conditions like heat exhaustion (heavy sweating, dizziness) and heatstroke (body temperature >40°C, organ failure) to chronic issues such as kidney injury from repeated dehydration and exacerbated cardiovascular diseases. In Southern Africa, emergency department visits and hospital admissions surge during heatwaves, with mortality rates highest among the elderly, whose thermoregulatory systems weaken with age.
Recent data from the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change in Africa (2025 report) reveals South Africans faced 13 heatwave days on average in 2024, contributing to rising heat-related illnesses. A 2026 study from Wits University documented increased cardiovascular strain during Johannesburg heat events, linking a 1°C rise to 5-10% more ambulance calls.
Pregnancy and Newborns: A Particularly Vulnerable Window
Emerging research underscores extreme heat's profound impact on maternal and fetal health. During pregnancy, elevated core temperatures can disrupt placental function, hormone regulation, and fetal development. Studies across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), including Southern Africa, show heat exposure in late gestation raises preterm birth risk by 9-18% and stillbirth by up to 25% per 1°C increase above thresholds.
In South Africa, a University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) analysis of 2024-2025 heatwaves found pregnant women in informal settlements experienced 15% higher odds of preterm labor, defined as birth before 37 weeks, often leading to low birth weight (<2500g) and neonatal intensive care needs. Stillbirth rates, fetal death after 28 weeks, spiked during events exceeding 38°C, with dehydration and reduced amniotic fluid as key mechanisms.
The ASSAf report cites global meta-analyses confirming these patterns, noting Southern Africa's unique risks from outdoor work among pregnant women in agriculture and domestic sectors. A UCT-led Bio-HEAT study protocol (2025) investigates biological pathways, including inflammation markers like C-reactive protein, linking heat stress to preterm birth.
Broader Vulnerabilities: Children, Elderly, and Outdoor Workers
Infants and young children, with higher metabolic rates and immature sweating mechanisms, face dehydration and heat illness risks doubling during peaks. The 2026 Health-e report notes South African children endured hyperthermia surges in recent heatwaves, with urban heat islands in Cape Town amplifying effects by 3-5°C.
- Elderly: Highest mortality, 30-50% excess deaths per heat event due to comorbidities.
- Outdoor workers: Agriculture employs 40% of SADC workforce; mining/construction add exposure. Informal traders (80-90% in some areas) lack shade or breaks, risking chronic kidney disease.
University of Cape Town's African Climate and Development Institute (ACDI) models project 20-30% productivity losses in these sectors by 2040 without adaptation.
South African Universities Leading Groundbreaking Research
Higher education institutions are at the forefront. Wits University's HEAT-Health Research Center, launched in 2024, uses wearable sensors and AI to map personal heat exposure in Johannesburg townships, revealing 25% higher risks for low-income groups. Their 2026 publication in Nature Medicine links short-term heat to intrapartum stillbirths.
UCT's HABVIA project evaluates cooling centers and hydration campaigns in vulnerable communities, partnering with Stellenbosch University on urban greening models reducing temperatures by 4°C. University of Pretoria (UP) researchers contributed to ASSAf via spatial analyses of heat vulnerability, integrating satellite data with health records.
These efforts align with the Lancet Countdown's call for Africa-led research, with SA universities producing 40% of regional heat-health papers.
Recent Heatwaves and Alarming Statistics from 2026
South Africa's 2026 summer saw record-breaking events: Joubertina hit 22.7°C minimums, while Western Cape advisories warned of prolonged >40°C. SAWS data shows 13 heatwave days per person in 2024, projected to double by 2030.
| Impact | Statistic (2024-2026) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Preterm Birth Increase | 15% during heatwaves | Wits Study |
| Stillbirth Risk | 20-25% per 1°C rise | Global LMIC Meta-analysis |
| Child Hyperthermia Cases | Doubled in urban areas | Health-e 2026 |
| Worker Productivity Loss | 25% in informal sectors | ASSAf Report |
These figures underscore the urgency, with climate models forecasting 4-6°C regional warming by 2100 under high-emission scenarios.
Adaptation Strategies: From Policy to Practice
ASSAf recommends embedding heat-health into National Adaptation Plans (NAPs). Key strategies include:
- Early warning systems using SAWS data integrated with health alerts.
- Occupational standards: Scheduled breaks, hydration mandates for mines/agriculture.
- Urban cooling: Green roofs, shade trees—UCT pilots show 2-4°C reductions.
- Health system resilience: Cool maternity wards, preterm screening protocols.
Western Cape's cross-sector heat plans, informed by LSHTM-UP collaborations, demonstrate feasibility, reducing ED visits by 12% in trials.Full ASSAf Report
Higher Education's Pivotal Role in Building Resilience
SA universities are incubating solutions: Wits' AI-driven heat forecasting apps, UCT's climate-health curricula for med students, and UP's interdisciplinary PhD programs on adaptation. ASSAf calls for increased DSTI funding for SADC collaborations, positioning academia as bridges between evidence and policy.
Programs like the HEAT-Center train next-gen researchers, fostering careers in climate-health intersection vital for SADC's future.
Future Outlook: Projections and Imperative for Action
Without mitigation, SADC faces 50-100 additional heat-related deaths daily by 2050, per Lancet models. Yet, opportunities abound: Renewables expansion cools grids, nature-based solutions restore ecosystems, and equity-focused policies protect the vulnerable.
Policymakers must prioritize heat in NDCs at COP31, while universities scale transdisciplinary research. Collaborative efforts, as exemplified by ASSAf, offer a roadmap to resilience.Lancet Countdown Africa 2025
Photo by Simon Barber on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives and Real-World Cases
Professor Singh emphasizes: 'Extreme heat demands integrated responses.' Community voices from Khayelitsha heat studies report sleep disruption worsening maternal stress. A 2026 Zimbabwe-SA trial showed hydration clinics cutting preterm rates by 10%.
Mining unions advocate heat acclimatization training, piloted at UP.
