Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2020)

How do weather and climate change impact the COVID-19 pandemic? Evidence from the Chinese mainland

  • Jing-Li Fan,
  • Yabin Da,
  • Bin Zeng,
  • Hao Zhang,
  • Zhu Liu,
  • Na Jia,
  • Jue Liu,
  • Bin Wang,
  • Lanlan Li,
  • Dabo Guan,
  • Xian Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abcf76
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
p. 014026

Abstract

Read online

The COVID-19 pandemic continues to expand, while the relationship between weather conditions and the spread of the virus remains largely debatable. In this paper, we attempt to examine this question by employing a flexible econometric model coupled with fine-scaled hourly temperature variations and a rich set of covariates for 291 cities in the Chinese mainland. More importantly, we combine the baseline estimates with climate-change projections from 21 global climate models to understand the pandemic in different scenarios. We found a significant negative relationship between temperatures and caseload. A one-hour increase in temperatures from 25 °C to 28 °C tends to reduce daily cases by 15.1%, relative to such an increase from −2 °C to 1 °C. Our results also suggest an inverted U-shaped nonlinear relationship between relative humidity and confirmed cases. Despite the negative effects of heat, we found that rising temperatures induced by climate change are unlikely to contain a hypothesized pandemic in the future. In contrast, cases would tend to increase by 10.9% from 2040 to 2059 with a representative concentration pathway (RCP) of 4.5 and by 7.5% at an RCP of 8.5, relative to 2020, though reductions of 1.8% and 18.9% were projected for 2080–2099 for the same RCPs, respectively. These findings raise concerns that the pandemic could worsen under the climate-change framework.

Keywords