Extreme heat occurs when air temperatures significantly exceed normal seasonal averages for prolonged periods, creating conditions that stress human thermoregulation and can lead to heat-related illness. The hazard is measured using indices that combine temperature and humidity to assess heat stress on the human body, such as wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT). The severity depends on temperature intensity, duration, humidity levels, nighttime cooling, and the vulnerability of exposed populations.
In the area you have selected (Mozambique) extreme heat hazard is classified as high based on modeled heat information currently available to this tool. This means that prolonged exposure to extreme heat, resulting in heat stress, is likely to occur, with approximately 20% chance per year (about 67% chance in the next five years). Risk studies, project planning decisions, project design, and construction methods must take into account the level of extreme heat hazard.
For hazard management recommendations, see documentation.
| High | Low |
| Medium | Very low |
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