The U.N. agency, in a report issued a day after a climate summit
began in Madrid, urged governments to meet ambitious targets to
reduce heat-trapping carbon emissions saying it could save a million
lives a year through lower air pollution alone.
"Health is paying the price of the climate crisis. Why? Because our
lungs, our brains, our cardiovascular system is very much suffering
from the causes of climate change which are overlapping very much
with the causes of air pollution," Maria Neira, Director of WHO's
Department of Environment, Climate Change and Health, told a news
briefing.
Yet less than 1% of international financing for climate action goes
to the health sector, she said, calling it "absolutely outrageous".
Global temperatures could rise sharply this century with
"wide-ranging and destructive" consequences after greenhouse gas
emissions hit record levels last year, international climate experts
warned last week.
"WHO considers that climate change is potentially the greatest
health threat of the 21st Century," said WHO expert Diarmid
Campbell-Lendrum.
"The reason for that is that unless we cut our carbon emissions,
then we will continue to undermine our food supplies, our water
supplies and our air quality - everything that we need to maintain
the good health of our populations," he said.
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The same sources cause air pollution and climate change, Campbell-Lendrum
said, adding: "So about two-thirds of the exposure to outdoor air
pollution is from burning of fossil fuels."
"WHO estimates that over 7 million people a year die from indoor and
outdoor air pollution. That is where the big win is," he said.
Some 101 countries responded to WHO's survey about the risks from
climate change - but not big players including India and the United
States.
"Over two-thirds have assessed that they have increased risks from
heat stress, from injury and death from extreme weather, from food,
water and vector-borne diseases and those range from everything from
cholera to malaria," Campbell-Lendrum said.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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