The Scotsman

CALL FOR FUEL PUMP HEALTH WARNINGS

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Petrol pumps should carry health warnings similar to those found on cigarette packets, according to a group of medical experts.

The experts, including environmen­tal health professors from the UK, US and India, argue that such warnings would be a cheap and effectivew­ay to make people aware of the impact of fossil fuels on the climate and encourage them to cut their reliance on the fuels.

Writing in the British Medical Journal, the group says that the warnings should be displayed at points of purchase, such as fuel pumps, as well as on energy bills and airline tickets. They believe that such warnings, including graphic images of the effect of pollution could help make fossil fuel use less socially acceptable.

They wrote :“warning labels connect the abstract threat of the climate emergency with the use of fossil fuels in the here and now.

“They sensitise people to the consequenc­es of their actions, representi­ng nudges designed to encourage users to choose alternativ­es to fossil fuels, thus increasing demand for zero-carbon renewable energy.”

Dr Mike Gill, a former regional director of public health who led the group responsibl­e for the report, said that the warnings could be as graphic as those used on cigarette packages.

He told the Guardian that the warnings needed to be “arresting” to have an impact and should included images that relate directly to the effects that impact on people’s health, such as lungs damaged by air pollution or the effect of severe weather, such as flooding or bodies of people who have died in heatwaves.

The experts argue that similar stark warnings on cigarette packaging have helped make the habit less socially acceptable as well as highlighti­ng the health impacts.

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