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This Week in AsiaHealth & Environment

Japan’s scorching summers could halt children’s outdoor sports by 2060, experts say

A study warns that youth sports may become unsafe due to heat unless greenhouse gases are reduced. Japan has seen 100 heat-related child deaths in the past 20 years

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Children play with water in Tajimi, Gifu Prefecture, central Japan, amid scorching summer heat. Rising temperatures in Japan may halt outdoor children’s sports by 2060, experts say. Photo: Kyodo
Julian Ryall
By 2060, summer temperatures in Japan could become so dangerously high that outdoor sports for children may need to be suspended entirely during parts of July and August – except for the cooler Hokkaido island – according to climate researchers.

A study by Japan’s National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES) and Waseda University warned that without a significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, many areas of the country will become unsuitable for youth sports in the late afternoon – when school club activities like baseball, athletics and football typically take place.

The findings, published in the Environmental Health journal on March 10, highlight what researchers say is a looming crisis for children’s health, as Japan’s intense summer heat merges with a deeply ingrained sporting culture, creating conditions that could pose serious risks.

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The issue is of particular concern to Takahiro Oyama, a researcher at the NIES Centre for Climate Change Adaptation and lead author of the report.

Children play in a water fountain in a Tokyo park, as a heatwave grips Japan in July 2018. Japan faces potential outdoor sports bans for children by 2060 due to soaring summer temperatures. Photo: AFP
Children play in a water fountain in a Tokyo park, as a heatwave grips Japan in July 2018. Japan faces potential outdoor sports bans for children by 2060 due to soaring summer temperatures. Photo: AFP

“When I was at school I did track and field sports through the summer and I experienced heat illness several times,” he told This Week in Asia. “At that time, around 20 years ago, our teachers did not realise that it was such a problem, although that has changed now and people are more aware.”

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