|
Society has 10 years to tackle climate change or humanity
could lose 50 years of progress in global health, a major new report claims.
However the study also
said that tackling global warming provides society with the greatest
opportunity to improve people’s health in this century.
RT.com report continues:
Academics at University
College London (UCL) and the University of Cambridge said the impact of climate
change on human health has been underestimated in a report published Monday.
The study calls on
governments to phase out coal power plants, improve pedestrian and cycling
infrastructure in cities, promote greener lifestyles and insulate more
buildings to cut energy use and prevent cold-related deaths and disease.
Professor Hugh Montgomery
of UCL’s Institute for Human Health and Performance described the threat facing
humanity as a “medical emergency.”
“Climate change is a
medical emergency. It thus demands and emergency response using technologies
that are available right now,” The co-chair of the Lancet Commission,
which published the report, said.
“It’s not our
grandchildren, it’s us and our children, and in this country as well as
abroad.”
The report was authored
by experts from around the world and is backed by Margaret Chan, head of the UN
World Health Organization.
Its authors identified
the lack of political will to combat climate change as the major barrier to
creating a low-carbon economy and the knock-on improvements to health and
poverty which would come about as a result.
The health impact of
climate change has long been overlooked, scientists argue.
The report calls on
doctors and health professionals to take a leading role in ending society’s “addiction” to
fossil fuels, confronting “powerful entrenched interests” in the same
way health experts took on the tobacco industry in the past.
Direct risks to health
include heatwaves, floods and droughts, while indirect and equally deadly risks
include air pollution, diseases, famines and mental illness.
The rapid closure of
coal-fired plants around the world is one of the report’s top recommendations
for preventing deaths from air pollution.
“We see climate change as
a major health issue and that it is often neglected in the policy debates,” co-chair
of the commission Professor Anthony Costello said.
“On our current
trajectory, going to 4 [degrees] C [of warming] is somewhere we don’t want to
go and that has very serious and potentially catastrophic effects for human
health and human survival and could undermine all of the last half-century’s
gains.”
“We see that as a medical
emergency because the action we need to do to stop that in its tracks and get
us back onto a 2C trajectory or less requires action now – and action in the
next ten years – otherwise the game could be over,” the director of UCL’s
Institute of Global Health added.
The report follows a rare
encyclical from Pope Francis published last week, in which he argued a moral
case for addressing climate change and poverty.
It also comes after a May
report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which found fossil fuel
companies receive US$5.3trillion (£3.4trillion) of global government subsidies
a year, equivalent to US$10 a minute.
No comments:
Post a Comment