Scientists from World Weather Attribution, the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, and Climate Central found that climate change had also doubled the number of heatwaves in the world. The research also identified 67 extreme heat events that were influenced by climate change.
Climate change modifies extreme weather events. In other words, it increases the intensity and likelihood of heatwaves and other extreme weather events. It doesn’t cause them; extreme weather events have always happened. But it does make heatwaves much worse and more harmful.
Many people still don’t appreciate the danger of heatwaves. We call them “silent killers” because they often cause serious harm without the dramatic visuals of storms or floods. Heatwaves can lead to dehydration, heatstroke, and even death – especially among vulnerable groups like the elderly, children, and those with pre-existing health conditions.
For example, this study focused on a heatwave that saw temperatures rise above 45°C in the Sahel (the semiarid region of western and north-central Africa). During this heatwave, Mali recorded temperatures of close to 50°C.
Several African countries experienced more than 90 days that were hotter than 90% of the days between 1991 and 2020. These were Burundi, Comoros, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Liberia, Mayotte, Rwanda and São Tomé and Principe. In other words, these countries all experienced at least three months (some, more than four months) of temperatures that were extremely hot.
African countries also experienced 14 of the 67 heat extreme events in the world. An extreme heat event is one that causes major damage to people and property, such as destroying harvests or causing buildings to crack. These heat events hit 42 of Africa’s 54 countries.
In Africa, the most strongly climate-influenced heatwave took place between 14 and 30 December 2024. We found that climate change made this event at least 15 times more likely to happen. The countries that were particularly affected were in west and central Africa.
Another heatwave took place in February 2025 in South Sudan. Schools had to be shut for two weeks because children were collapsing from heatstroke. The whole population was told to stay out of the sun and hydrate. This was a problem because many houses in South Sudan are built with iron roofs, and lack airconditioning, electric fans and electricity. Not all have clean water.
Southern African countries experienced four extreme heat events, including two five-day heatwaves, in 2024. These were up to nine times more likely caused by climate change. Northern African countries also suffered several serious heatwaves.
This analysis underscores the serious impact of rising temperatures in Africa. With every small increase in warming, more people across the continent will face extreme heat that threatens their health and well-being.
Clearly, climate change fuelled heat is already making life much more difficult in Africa. As long as the climate warms, more dangerous heat will hit Africa. Adaptation measures alone will become insufficient to protect communities from the escalating risks.
Funds need to be made available immediately for African countries to adapt to extreme heat events. These should be directed to the countries that are worst affected. To prevent extreme heat events from getting much worse in future, the only solution is for the world to stop using planet-heating fossil fuels as soon as possible.
A Guest Editorial