Northern Europe Source: Globocan 2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Northern Europe Source: Globocan 2020 Northern Europe Source: Globocan 2020 Number of new cases in 2020, both sexes, all ages Geography Prostate 93 431 (13.2%) Breast 83 177 (11.8%) Other cancers 339 960 (48.1%) Colorectum 81 638 (11.6%) Lung 75 051 (10.6%) Melanoma of skin 33 551 (4.7%) Total: 706 808 Number of new cases in 2020, males, all ages Numbers at a glance Total population Prostate 93 431 (24.7%) 106261271 Other cancers 167 021 (44.1%) Number of new cases Colorectum 44 464 (11.8%) Lung 39 413 (10.4%) 706808 Number of deaths Melanoma of skin Bladder 16 937 (4.5%) 17 151 (4.5%) Total: 378 417 276642 Number of new cases in 2020, females, all ages Number of prevalent cases (5-year) Breast 83 177 (25.3%) 2337000 Other cancers 137 922 (42%) Data source and methods Incidence Melanoma of skin Colorectum Population weighted average of the rates of the region- 16 614 (5.1%) 37 174 (11.3%) specific countries included in GLOBOCAN 2020. Mortality Corpus uteri Lung 17 866 (5.4%) 35 638 (10.9%) Population weighted average of the rates of the region- specific countries included in GLOBOCAN 2020. Total: 328 391 Prevalence Summary statistic 2020 Sum of region-specific prevalent cases. Males Females Both sexes Populations included Population 52 487 382 53 773 889 106 261 271 Number of new cancer cases 378 417 328 391 706 808 Channel Islands*, Denmark, Estonia, Faeroe Islands*, Age-standardized incidence rate (World) 343.6 296.5 316.5 Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Isle of Man*, Latvia, Lithuania, Risk of developing cancer before the age of 75 years (%) 32.9 28.2 30.5 Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom Number of cancer deaths 147 516 129 126 276 642 Age-standardized mortality rate (World) 115.1 87.9 99.8 Risk of dying from cancer before the age of 75 years (%) 11.4 9.2 10.3 5-year prevalent cases 1 238 938 1 098 062 2 337 000 Top 5 most frequent cancers excluding non-melanoma skin cancer Prostate Breast Prostate (ranked by cases) Colorectum Colorectum Breast Lung Lung Colorectum Bladder Corpus uteri Lung Melanoma Melanoma Melanoma * Country not available in GLOBOCAN 2020 but included in the region The Global Cancer Observatory - All Rights Reserved - March, 2021. Page 1 Northern Europe Source: Globocan Incidence, Mortality and Prevalence by cancer site New cases Deaths 5-year prevalence (all ages) Cancer Number Rank (%) Cum.risk Number Rank (%) Cum.risk Number Prop. (per 100 000) Prostate 93 431 1 13.2 10.40 20 937 2 7.6 0.94 385 976 735.37 Breast 83 177 2 11.8 9.35 17 964 4 6.5 1.45 352 080 654.74 Lung 75 051 3 10.6 3.63 54 421 1 19.7 2.39 95 217 89.61 Colon 52 747 4 7.5 2.40 19 844 3 7.2 0.63 158 203 148.88 Melanoma of skin 33 551 5 4.7 1.91 4 747 17 1.7 0.20 118 303 111.33 Rectum 26 584 6 3.8 1.39 13 171 6 4.8 0.50 87 103 81.97 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 24 489 7 3.5 1.29 8 308 11 3.0 0.29 79 211 74.54 Bladder 23 333 8 3.3 1.02 9 563 9 3.5 0.25 77 846 73.26 Kidney 21 677 9 3.1 1.18 7 563 14 2.7 0.30 66 430 62.52 Pancreas 19 448 10 2.8 0.87 17 493 5 6.3 0.75 14 372 13.53 Corpus uteri 17 866 11 2.5 2.03 4 155 18 1.5 0.32 71 082 132.19 Leukaemia 16 423 12 2.3 0.83 8 447 10 3.1 0.29 49 486 46.57 Oesophagus 12 968 13 1.8 0.64 10 985 7 4.0 0.49 15 650 14.73 Liver 11 924 14 1.7 0.58 10 513 8 3.8 0.45 11 821 11.12 Stomach 11 477 15 1.6 0.52 7 768 12 2.8 0.31 18 612 17.52 Brain, central nervous system 9 554 16 1.4 0.57 7 638 13 2.8 0.43 28 953 27.25 Multiple myeloma 9 469 17 1.3 0.46 5 609 16 2.0 0.19 26 336 24.78 Ovary 9 457 18 1.3 1.00 6 530 15 2.4 0.58 27 678 51.47 Thyroid 9 378 19 1.3 0.63 779 26 0.28 0.03 36 228 34.09 Lip, oral cavity 9 039 20 1.3 0.54 2 718 20 0.98 0.14 29 023 27.31 Cervix uteri 6 666 21 0.94 0.90 2 134 21 0.77 0.22 20 713 38.52 Oropharynx 4 432 22 0.63 0.31 1 482 22 0.54 0.09 13 731 12.92 Testis 4 072 23 0.58 0.59 108 34 0.04 0.01 18 749 35.72 Mesothelioma 3 946 24 0.56 0.18 3 396 19 1.2 0.12 4 581 4.31 Larynx 3 826 25 0.54 0.23 1 474 23 0.53 0.07 13 306 12.52 Hodgkin lymphoma 3 288 26 0.47 0.22 511 29 0.18 0.02 13 480 12.69 Anus 2 307 27 0.33 0.14 753 27 0.27 0.03 7 626 7.18 Vulva 2 227 28 0.32 0.20 795 25 0.29 0.04 7 495 13.94 Gallbladder 1 867 29 0.26 0.08 1 072 24 0.39 0.04 2 119 1.99 Salivary glands 1 460 30 0.21 0.08 463 30 0.17 0.02 5 154 4.85 Hypopharynx 1 275 31 0.18 0.08 682 28 0.25 0.04 2 542 2.39 Penis 1 155 32 0.16 0.13 252 31 0.09 0.02 4 048 7.71 Vagina 450 33 0.06 0.04 185 33 0.07 0.01 1 355 2.52 Nasopharynx 415 34 0.06 0.03 247 32 0.09 0.01 1 455 1.37 Kaposi sarcoma 244 35 0.03 0.01 17 35 0.01 0.00 822 0.77 All cancer sites 706 808 - - 30.45 276 642 - - 10.25 2 337 000 2199.3 Age-standardized (World) incidence rates per sex, top 10 cancers Males Females Breast 86.4 Prostate 83.4 Colorectum 39.2 28.8 Lung 33.3 26.8 Melanoma of skin 17.4 18.4 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 13.4 9.5 Kidney 13.5 7.3 Bladder 13.8 4.2 Leukaemia 10.2 6.9 Corpus uteri 16.4 100 80 60 40 20 0 20 40 60 80 100 ASR (World) per 100 000 Age-standardized (World) incidence and mortality rates, top 10 cancers Incidence Mortality Breast 86.4 13.7 Prostate 83.4 13.0 Colorectum 33.6 11.4 Lung 29.7 20.1 Melanoma of skin 17.8 1.9 Corpus uteri 16.4 2.7 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 11.4 2.8 Cervix uteri 10.4 2.2 Kidney 10.3 2.7 Ovary 8.8 4.9 100 80 60 40 20 0 20 40 60 80 100 ASR (World) per 100 000 The Global Cancer Observatory - All Rights Reserved - March, 2021. Page 2.
Recommended publications
  • Fresh- and Brackish-Water Cold-Tolerant Species of Southern Europe: Migrants from the Paratethys That Colonized the Arctic
    water Review Fresh- and Brackish-Water Cold-Tolerant Species of Southern Europe: Migrants from the Paratethys That Colonized the Arctic Valentina S. Artamonova 1, Ivan N. Bolotov 2,3,4, Maxim V. Vinarski 4 and Alexander A. Makhrov 1,4,* 1 A. N. Severtzov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, 119071 Moscow, Russia; [email protected] 2 Laboratory of Molecular Ecology and Phylogenetics, Northern Arctic Federal University, 163002 Arkhangelsk, Russia; [email protected] 3 Federal Center for Integrated Arctic Research, Russian Academy of Sciences, 163000 Arkhangelsk, Russia 4 Laboratory of Macroecology & Biogeography of Invertebrates, Saint Petersburg State University, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: Analysis of zoogeographic, paleogeographic, and molecular data has shown that the ancestors of many fresh- and brackish-water cold-tolerant hydrobionts of the Mediterranean region and the Danube River basin likely originated in East Asia or Central Asia. The fish genera Gasterosteus, Hucho, Oxynoemacheilus, Salmo, and Schizothorax are examples of these groups among vertebrates, and the genera Magnibursatus (Trematoda), Margaritifera, Potomida, Microcondylaea, Leguminaia, Unio (Mollusca), and Phagocata (Planaria), among invertebrates. There is reason to believe that their ancestors spread to Europe through the Paratethys (or the proto-Paratethys basin that preceded it), where intense speciation took place and new genera of aquatic organisms arose. Some of the forms that originated in the Paratethys colonized the Mediterranean, and overwhelming data indicate that Citation: Artamonova, V.S.; Bolotov, representatives of the genera Salmo, Caspiomyzon, and Ecrobia migrated during the Miocene from I.N.; Vinarski, M.V.; Makhrov, A.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Past and Current Trends of Balkan Migrations
    ESPACE, POPULATIONS, SOCIETES, 2004-3 pp. 519-531 Corrado BONIFAZI Istituto di Ricerche sulla Popolazione e le Politiche Marija MAMOLO Sociali IRPPS via Nizza, 128 Roma Italie [email protected] Past and Current Trends of Balkan Migrations INTRODUCTION There is hardly another region of the world aspects of the Balkans [Prévélakis, 1994], where the current situation of migrations is affecting their specific nature also with still considerably influenced by the past his- regard to migration. However, the migration tory as in the Balkans. Migrations have been outlook of the Balkans does not just involve a fundamental element in the history of the these flows, which in some respects tend to Balkans, accompanying its stormy events reflect the movements de l’histoire de [Her√ak and Mesi´c, 1990] and obviously longue durée, but it is rather much more continuing to do so, even at the start of the structured and complex. Focusing for the new millennium. For centuries, invasions, moment on the most recent period, together wars, military defeats and victories have with the forced migrations caused by the been a more or less direct cause of popula- ethnic conflicts in the former Yugoslavia tion movements, in a continuous and still and the ethnic migrations followed by the ongoing transformation of the distribution collapse of the regimes created by “real and the overlapping of religions, languages, socialism”, we find both forms of labour ethnic groups and cultures [Sardon, 2001]. migration and transit migration. Therefore, Since the arrival of the Slav populations in the Balkans are also characterised by many the 7th century, the Ottoman expansion, the of the typical elements of the current forms extension of the Hapsburg domain, the rise of mobility in Eastern and Central Europe and growth of national states, the two World [Okólski, 1998; Bonifazi, 2003].
    [Show full text]
  • FIGURE 8.1 I EUROPE Stretching from Iceland in the Atlantic to The
    FIGURE 8.1 I EUROPE Stretching from Iceland in the Atlantic to the Black Sea, Europe includes 40 countries, ranging in size from large states, such as France and Germany, to the microstates of Liechtenstein, Andorra, San Marino, and Monaco. Currently the population of the region is about 531 mil- lion. Europe is highly urbanized and, for the most part, relatively wealthy, par- ticularly the western portion. However, economic and social differences between eastern and western Europe remain a problem. (left) Migration re- mains one of Europe’s most troublesome issues. While some immigrates will- ingly embrace European values and culture, others prefer to remain more distant by resisting cultural and political integration. In Britain, for example, there is ongoing debate about Muslim women wearing their traditional veils. (Dave Thompson/AP Wide World Photos) 8 Europe SETTING THE BOUNDARIES The European region is small compared to the United roots. The Greeks and Romans divided their worlds into problematic. Now some geography textbooks extend States. In fact, Europe from Iceland to the Black Sea the three continents of Europe, Asia, and Africa sepa- Europe to the border with Russia, which places the would fit easily into the eastern two-thirds of North rated by the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, and the two countries of Ukraine and Belarus, former Soviet America. A more apt comparison would be Canada, Bosporus Strait. A northward extension of the Black Sea republics, in eastern Europe. Though an argument can as Europe, too, is a northern region. More than half was thought to separate Europe from Asia, and only in be made for that expanded definition of Europe, recent of Europe lies north of the 49th parallel, the line of the 16th century was this proven false.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Projections for the Midwest: Availability, Interpretation and Synthesis
    Climate Projections for the Midwest: Availability, Interpretation and Synthesis WHITE PAPER PREPARED FOR THE U.S. GLOBAL CHANGE RESEARCH PROGRAM NATIONAL CLIMATE ASSESSMENT MIDWEST TECHNICAL INPUT REPORT Julie A. Winkler1, Raymond W. Arritt2, Sara C. Pryor3 1 Department of Geography, Michigan State University 2 Department of Agronomy, Iowa State University 3 Department of Geological Sciences, Indiana University Recommended Citation: Winkler, J.A., R.W. Arritt, S.C. Pryor. 2012: Climate Projections for the Midwest: Availability, Interpretation and Synthesis. In: U.S. National Climate Assessment Midwest Technical Input Report. J. Winkler, J. Andresen, J. Hatfield, D. Bidwell, and D. Brown, coordinators. Available from the Great Lakes Integrated Sciences and Assessment (GLISA) Center, http://glisa.msu.edu/docs/NCA/MTIT_Future.pdf. At the request of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, the Great Lakes Integrated Sciences and Assessments Center (GLISA) and the National Laboratory for Agriculture and the Environment formed a Midwest regional team to provide technical input to the National Climate Assessment (NCA). In March 2012, the team submitted their report to the NCA Development and Advisory Committee. This white paper is one chapter from the report, focusing on potential impacts, vulnerabilities, and adaptation options to climate variability and change for the future climate sector. U.S. National Climate Assessment: Midwest Technical Input Report: Future Climate Sector White Paper Contents Summary ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Physical Features of Europe 6Th Grade World Studies LABEL the FOLLOWING FEATURES on the MAP
    The Physical Features of Europe 6th Grade World Studies LABEL THE FOLLOWING FEATURES ON THE MAP: Danube River Rhine River English Channel Physical Mediterranean Sea Features European Plain Alps Pyrenees Ural Mountains Iberian Peninsula Scandinavian Peninsula Danube River . The Danube is Europe's second-longest river, after the Volga River. It is located in Central and Eastern Europe. Rhine River . Begins in the Swiss canton of Graubünden in the southeastern Swiss Alps then flows through the Rhineland and eventually empties into the North Sea in the Netherlands. English Channel . The English Channel, also called simply the Channel, is the body of water that separates southern England from northern France, and links the southern part of the North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean. Mediterranean Sea . The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa, and on the east by the Levant. European Plain . The European Plain or Great European Plain is a plain in Europe and is a major feature of one of four major topographical units of Europe - the Central and Interior Lowlands. Alps . The Alps are the highest and most extensive mountain range system that lies entirely in Europe Pyrenees . The Pyrenees mountain range separates the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of Europe. Ural Mountains . The Ural Mountains, or simply the Urals, are a mountain range that runs approximately from north to south through western Russia, from the coast of the Arctic Ocean to the Ural River and northwestern Kazakhstan.
    [Show full text]
  • Europe Unit Chapters 12, 13, 14, & 15
    Europe Unit Chapters 12, 13, 14, & 15 Southern Europe CHAPTER 12 A. Physical Geography 1. Southern Europe is comprised of 7 countries – Portugal, Spain, Andorra, Italy, Monaco, San Marino, & Greece 2. Southern Europe is largely made up of three large peninsulas. ⚪ Iberian Peninsula ⚪ Italian Peninsula ⚪ Balkan Peninsula 3. Southern Europe also includes many islands. Some, such as Crete and Sicily, are very large. 4. Because the peninsulas and islands all border on the Mediterranean Sea, the region of Southern Europe is also called Mediterranean Europe. B. Features of Southern Europe 1. Landforms - 4 Major mountain ranges in Southern Europe ⚫ Pyrenees – Spain, France, & Andorra ⚫ Apennines - Italy ⚫ Alps – Austria, Slovenia, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Germany, France, Italy, & Monaco ⚫ Pindus – Greece & Albania a. Islands ⚫ Balearic Islands, Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, Crete, Greek b. Coastal plains ⚫ Spain, Portugal, Italy, & Greece C. Water Features 1. Seas ⚪ Mediterranean – Borders all of Southern Europe ⚪ Adriatic – Between Italy and the Balkans ⚪ Aegean – Between Greece and Turkey ⚪ Ionian – between southern Italy and Greece and Albania 2. Rivers ⚪ Tagus – Portugal And Spain ⚪ Po - Italy ⚪ Ebro - Spain ⚪ Tiber – Italy 3. River Valley ⚪ Po River Valley D. Climate ⚫ Southern Europe is famous for its pleasant climate. ⚫ Most of the region enjoys warm, sunny days and mild nights for most of the year. Little rain falls during the summer, but rain is more common in the winter. 1. Geographers call the type of climate found in Southern Europe a Mediterranean climate. 2. Agriculture ⚫ The Mediterranean climate is ideal for growing many types of crops. ⚫ Farmers plant citrus fruits, grapes, olives, wheat, and many other products.
    [Show full text]
  • Q3 2020 Revenue by Industry
    Press release Third quarter of 2020 Spring transformation accelerating commercial momentum Order entry up +20% year-on-year at constant currency, Book to bill ratio at 124% (excl. Siemens renewal) Renewed and expanded partnership with Siemens for € 3 billion over 5 years Revenue at € 2,644 million, -2.5% at constant currency, -3.5% organically (Q2 at -4.8%) All 2020 objectives confirmed Paris, October 22, 2020. Atos, a global leader in digital transformation, today announces its revenue for the third quarter of 2020. Elie Girard, CEO, said: “Our ongoing Spring transformation is enabling the group to adapt rapidly to meet customer needs in each Industry. For Q3, this has resulted in a record high order book (even without Siemens renewal and expansion) as well as a record high pipeline of commercial offers. Thanks to our 105,000 colleagues embarked on this transformation, the Group is achieving success both qualitatively and quantitatively. Our business in Digital, Cloud, Security and Decarbonization is growing rapidly and changing the profile of the Group significantly. This quarter was obviously also marked by the renewal and expansion of our strategic partnership with Siemens. Overall, this very high level of commercial activity will support the revenue recovery started in Q3 and the return to growth in 2021. Group’s teams have also strengthened the pioneering position of Atos in many dimensions over the quarter. In Corporate Social Responsibility, Atos has been once more recognized as the leader of its sector. Our offerings in Decarbonization find a resounding interest from our customers with several signatures already in Q3.
    [Show full text]
  • 3 Appendix 1. United Nations Geoscheme the United Nations
    Appendix 1. United Nations Geoscheme The United Nations Geoscheme divides the world into regions and sub-regions. This assignment is for statistical convenience and does not imply any assumption regarding political or other affiliation of countries or territories. Table 1. United Nations Geoscheme (data from https://unstats.un.org/unsd/methodology/m49/) Region Sub-region Countries and Territories Africa Northern Africa Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, Western Sahara Eastern Africa British Indian Ocean Territory, Burundi, Comoros, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, French Southern Territories, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mozambique, Réunion, Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe Middle Africa Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Sao Tome and Principe Southern Africa Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa Western Africa Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Saint Helena, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo Americas Latin America and the Caribbean: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Bonaire, Sint Caribbean Eustatius and Saba, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Curaçao, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Jamaica, Martinique, Montserrat, Puerto Rico, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Martin (French Part),
    [Show full text]
  • Tax Competitiveness of the New EU Member States
    Journal of Risk and Financial Management Article Tax Competitiveness of the New EU Member States Askoldas Podviezko 1,* , Lyudmila Parfenova 2 and Andrey Pugachev 2 1 Agricultural Policy and Foreign Trade Division, Lithuanian Institute of Agrarian Economics, LT-03105 Vilnius, Lithuania 2 Economic Faculty, P. G. Demidov Yaroslavl State University, RU-150003 Yaroslavl, Russia; [email protected] (L.P.); [email protected] (A.P.) * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +370-5-2614525 Received: 7 December 2018; Accepted: 21 January 2019; Published: 14 February 2019 Abstract: This paper investigates tax competitiveness among the EU member countries. The tax competition of countries causes both positive and negative effects on macroeconomic processes such as the effectiveness of government spending, the rationality of supply of externalities, and the length and amplitudes of business cycles. A considerable reduction of corporate tax in the EU is related to increased tax competition after new members entered the EU. Multiple criteria methods were chosen for the quantitative evaluation of EU countries from different regions of the EU. Criteria of evaluation were chosen and structured into a hierarchy. The convergence process of the new members of the EU is reinforced with the increasing tax competitiveness of such countries. Results of the multiple criteria evaluation revealed both the factors that increased the tax competitiveness of new members of the EU, and outlined the factors that hampered such competition. Keywords: state tax risks; loss of competitiveness of tax system; tax competition; tax revenues; tax burden; multiple criteria evaluation; PROMETHEE 1. Introduction The process of globalization increasingly penetrates economic relations through all levels of the world’s economy.
    [Show full text]
  • Western Military Capability in Northern Europe 2020 Part I: Collective Defence
    Western Military Capability in Northern Europe 2020 Part I: Collective Defence Eva Hagström Frisell and Krister Pallin (eds) Albin Aronsson, Bengt-Göran Bergstrand, Robert Dalsjö, Johan Engvall, Jakob Gustafsson, Michael Jonsson, Diana Lepp, Viktor Lundquist, Björn Ottosson and Anna Sundberg FOI-R--5012--SE February 2021 Western Military Capability in Northern Europe 2020 Part I: Collective Defence Eva Hagström Frisell and Krister Pallin (eds) Albin Aronsson, Bengt-Göran Bergstrand, Robert Dalsjö, Johan Engvall, Jakob Gustafsson, Michael Jonsson, Diana Lepp, Viktor Lundquist, Björn Ottosson and Anna Sundberg FOI-R--5012--SE Title Western Military Capability in Northern Europe 2020 Part I: Collective Defence Report No. FOI-R--5012--SE Month February Year 2021 Pages 132 ISSN 1650-1942 Customer Ministry of Defence Research Area 8. Security Policy Project No. A 12112 Approved by Malek Finn Khan Division Defence Analysis Cover: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP. US Marines prepare their M1 Abrams tank before taking part in an exercise to capture an airfield during Trident Juncture 2018, near the town of Oppdal, Norway. This work is protected by the Swedish Act on Copyright in Literary and Artistic Works (1960:729). Citation is permitted in accordance with article 22 in said act. Any form of use that goes beyond what is permitted by Swedish copyright law, requires the written permission of FOI. ii FOI-R--5012--SE Abstract The conclusion of our analysis of Western military capability in Northern Europe in 2017 was that the West had several shortcomings compared to Russia when it came to high-intensity warfighting. Considerable resources and time would be required before the West could change the situation.
    [Show full text]
  • North–South Polarization of European Electricity Consumption Under Future Warming
    North–south polarization of European electricity consumption under future warming Leonie Wenza,b,c,1, Anders Levermanna,b,d, and Maximilian Auffhammere,f aPotsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, 14473 Potsdam, Germany; bInstitute of Physics, Potsdam University, 14476 Potsdam, Germany; cMercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change, 10829 Berlin, Germany; dLamont–Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, New York, NY 10964; eDepartment of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; and fNational Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA 02138 Edited by M. Granger Morgan, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, and approved July 27, 2017 (received for review March 15, 2017) There is growing empirical evidence that anthropogenic climate nomic output (20, 21). Human mortality rates increase during heat change will substantially affect the electric sector. Impacts will waves (22), whereas heat stress depresses labor productivity (23, stem both from the supply side—through the mitigation of green- 24). Adaptation responses to offset these negative impacts of cli- house gases—and from the demand side—through adaptive re- mate change will influence electricity consumption and load pat- sponses to a changing environment. Here we provide evidence terns. While demand for space heating is expected to decrease in of a polarization of both peak load and overall electricity con- response to less-frequent cold days, increased adoption and oper- sumption under future warming for the world’s third-largest ation of air conditioning due to growing demand for space cooling electricity market—the 35 countries of Europe. We statistically during hot days will put upward pressure on electricity consumption estimate country-level dose–response functions between daily as well as daily and seasonal peak loads (14, 18, 25–29).
    [Show full text]
  • The Balkans – Asylum Seekers, Migrants, and Refugees In
    Briefing Note Update: The Balkans - Asylum Seekers, Migrants, and Refugees in Transit Briefing Note Update – 17 November 2015 Key Findings Anticipated The Balkans The flow of people is expected to continue, with an scope and estimated arrival of 5,000 people per day between Asylum Seekers, Migrants, and Refugees in Transit scale November and February 2016. As more borders are closing, including the border between Slovenia and Croatia, people may be stranded with limited Need for international Not required Low Moderate Significant Major accommodation and assistance. assistance X The approaching winter is exacerbating the situation, and Insignificant Minor Moderate Significant Major increasing humanitarian needs, particularly in terms of Expected impact X supply of adequate winterised shelter and NFIs. Seasonal conditions will also make the boat crossing from Turkey to Greece more treacherous, leading to an increase Crisis Overview in drowning and hypothermia. The number of people transiting through the Balkans is As of 16 November, close to 820,000 people have arrived in Europe by sea in 2015, vastly underestimated, largely due to a significant number of including 673,916 to Greece, 142,400 to Italy, 2,797 to Spain and 105 to Malta. 85% people transiting bypassing registration. of the arrivals are from the world’s top ten refugee-producing countries. 52% of the refugees are from Syria, 10% from Afghanistan, 6% from Iraq. As the sea route to Priorities for Shelter: winterisation assistance and heating in reception Italy via North Africa is longer and more risky, and as the number of Syrians has humanitarian centres increased, more people are travelling through Greece and then through the Balkans intervention NFIs: blankets and winter clothes to reach northern and western Europe.
    [Show full text]