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Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Health and social equity must form beating heart of COP26 negotiations, says global health sector

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1248 days ago
20211101

(Glas­gow, No­vem­ber 1, 2021) — World lead­ers must make health and so­cial eq­ui­ty the beat­ing heart of COP26 ne­go­ti­a­tions, by tak­ing con­cert­ed ac­tion to lim­it glob­al heat­ing to less than 1.5oC in line with Paris Cli­mate Agree­ment and find­ings of the sci­en­tif­ic com­mu­ni­ty and de­liv­er­ing a rapid and just tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fu­els—be­gin­ning with im­me­di­ate cuts to sub­si­dies, said the Glob­al Cli­mate and Health Al­liance, to­day.

“Peo­ple are dy­ing and be­ing harmed now by cli­mate change: the de­ci­sions made in these next two weeks will de­fine the health and well­be­ing of peo­ple all over the world for decades to come”, said Jeni Miller Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor at the Glob­al Cli­mate and Health Al­liance, made up of health pro­fes­sion­al or­ga­ni­za­tions, health NGOs, and health and en­vi­ron­ment al­liances from around the world.

“At COP26, na­tion­al lead­ers must pri­ori­tise health and so­cial eq­ui­ty over pol­i­tics, prof­it and un­proven tech­no­log­i­cal fix­es”, added Miller. “Health and eq­ui­ty must be­come the lynch­pin around which ac­tion is tak­en to re­duce glob­al emis­sions, in or­der to mit­i­gate the im­pacts of cli­mate change on hu­man health."

“The glob­al cli­mate cri­sis is clear­ly al­so a grow­ing health cri­sis and is al­ready hav­ing an un­prece­dent­ed im­pact on peo­ple’s lives and well­be­ing world­wide, with dev­as­tat­ing heat waves and oth­er ex­treme weath­er events caus­ing deaths, and drought dri­ving mil­lions of peo­ple in al­ready-vul­ner­a­ble com­mu­ni­ties to the brink of famine”, said Miller.

“Cur­rent cli­mate com­mit­ments have us on the path for tem­per­a­ture ris­es of be­tween 2.7 and 3.1 de­grees Cel­sius this cen­tu­ry. COP26 del­e­ga­tions must work to­geth­er to­wards get­ting emis­sions in line with the 1.5oC lim­it agreed six years ago in Paris, if we are to pre­vent cat­a­stroph­ic harm to peo­ple’s health and well­be­ing”.

“To achieve this, gov­ern­ments must agree to phase out pub­lic fund­ing and fa­cil­i­tat­ing of fos­sil fu­els, with high in­come coun­tries—which bear the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for the bulk of cli­mate warm­ing emis­sions to date—mak­ing the great­est cuts the fastest”.

“High in­come coun­tries must al­so de­liv­er the promised US$100B cli­mate fi­nance per year to sup­port low­er in­come coun­tries to ad­dress cli­mate change, in­clud­ing funds to help coun­tries pro­tect their peo­ple and their health sys­tems from the im­pacts of cli­mate change we are al­ready see­ing, as well as funds to sup­port cli­mate mit­i­ga­tion mea­sures.”

“In ad­di­tion, every gov­ern­ment must com­mit to build­ing cli­mate re­silient, low-car­bon, sus­tain­able health sys­tems, while lever­ag­ing the un­par­al­leled pub­lic fund­ing be­ing in­vest­ed in Covid-19 re­cov­ery pack­ages to sup­port cli­mate ac­tion, and re­duce so­cial and health in­equities, thus avert­ing an even greater threat to health and economies”.

“Coun­tries that ac­tu­al­ly de­liv­er on com­mit­ments, poli­cies, and in­vest­ments to tack­le cli­mate change, and that do so with health and eq­ui­ty ex­plic­it­ly in mind, will reap the great­est health ben­e­fits for their pop­u­lace, and see health cost sav­ings, while do­ing their part to avert far greater warm­ing. From clean­er air to se­cure ac­cess to healthy foods, to safer streets and health­i­er more live­able cities -- the po­ten­tial ben­e­fits to peo­ple’s health and well­be­ing in coun­tries that act on cli­mate change are im­mense”.

In Oc­to­ber, more than 500 or­gan­i­sa­tions rep­re­sent­ing 46 mil­lion nurs­es, doc­tors and health pro­fes­sion­als world­wide—about two thirds of the glob­al health work­force—signed an open let­ter to the 197 gov­ern­ment lead­ers and na­tion­al del­e­ga­tions ahead of COP26, warn­ing that the cli­mate cri­sis is the sin­gle biggest health threat fac­ing hu­man­i­ty, and call­ing on world lead­ers to de­liv­er on cli­mate ac­tion.

“The health com­mu­ni­ty world­wide is call­ing for ac­tion on cli­mate change be­cause we rec­og­nize it as a ma­jor threat to health, and be­cause cli­mate ac­tion presents huge op­por­tu­ni­ties for health. What we want to see out of COP is a recom­mit­ment to the promis­es made, in ser­vice of the “right to health,” in the Paris Agree­ment. The sci­ence is clear: this COP must ac­cel­er­ate cli­mate ac­tion, to avert the un­fold­ing cli­mate and health cri­sis and to de­liv­er a health­i­er fu­ture for all.”

 

COP26 Event: No­vem­ber 6th Glob­al Con­fer­ence on Health and Cli­mate Change

 

Health pro­fes­sion­als and lead­ers from around the world will be at­tend­ing the Glob­al Health and Cli­mate Con­fer­ence on Sat­ur­day No­vem­ber 6th, 9:00-17:30 GMT, dur­ing the COP26 UN cli­mate change con­fer­ence.

The Glob­al Con­fer­ence on Health & Cli­mate Change is or­ga­nized by the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion (WHO) and the Glob­al Cli­mate and Health Al­liance (GCHA), in close col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Glas­gow Cale­don­ian Uni­ver­si­ty and its Cen­tre for Cli­mate Jus­tice, the UK Health Al­liance on Cli­mate Change, the Cen­tre on Cli­mate Change and Plan­e­tary Health of the Lon­don School of Hy­giene and Trop­i­cal Med­i­cine, and the Well­come Trust.

It is be­ing held at the Glas­gow Cale­don­ian Uni­ver­si­ty (Cow­cad­dens Road, G4 0BA), as well as on­line via livestream at who.int and cli­mate­and­healthal­liance.org.

Keynote speak­ers in­clude Ms Mary Robin­son, For­mer Pres­i­dent of Ire­land and Chair of The El­ders; Ms Ju­lia Gillard, for­mer Prime Min­is­ter of Aus­tralia and Chair of Well­come Trust; Dr Tedros Ad­hanom Ghe­breye­sus, WHO Di­rec­tor-Gen­er­al; Su­san Aitken, Leader of Glas­gow City Coun­cil; Jeni Miller, Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor of Glob­al Cli­mate and Health Al­liance; Pro­fes­sor Tah­seen Jafry, Di­rec­tor of GCU’s Cen­tre for Cli­mate Jus­tice; and min­is­ters of health from sev­er­al vul­ner­a­ble coun­tries.

Dr Fiona Godlee, Ed­i­tor of the British Med­ical Jour­nal, and Dr Maria Neira, WHO Di­rec­tor of the En­vi­ron­ment, Cli­mate Change and Health De­part­ment, will mod­er­ate a se­ries of con­ver­sa­tions with high-lev­el rep­re­sen­ta­tives from var­i­ous sec­tors—in­clud­ing in en­er­gy, trans­port, na­ture, food sys­tems, and fi­nance—on the trans­for­ma­tion­al ac­tions need­ed in or­der to pro­tect peo­ple’s health from cli­mate change.

EnvironmentHealthUnited Nations


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