PARIS, May 24 — Current policies to limit global warming will expose more than a fifth of humanity to extreme and potentially life-threatening heat by century’s end, researchers warned Monday.

Earth’s surface temperature is on track to rise 2.7 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels by 2100, pushing more than two billion people — 22 per cent of projected global population — well outside the climate comfort zone that has allowed our species to thrive for millennia, the scientists reported in Nature Sustainability.

The countries with the highest number of people facing deadly heat in this scenario are India (600 million), Nigeria (300 million), Indonesia (100 million), as well as the Philippines and Pakistan (80 million each).

“That’s a profound reshaping of the habitability of the surface of the planet, and could lead potentially to the large-scale reorganisation of where people live,” said lead author Tim Lenton, director of the Global Systems Institute at the University of Exeter.