Manila Bulletin

Air pollution, climate change kill millions of people every year

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GENEVA (PNA/Xinhua)–Each year more than seven million deaths worldwide could be attributed to air pollution, and climate change caused tens of thousands of deaths annually from other causes, Margaret Chan, DirectorGe­neral of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), warned Thursday.

Speaking during the UN Human Rights Council’s panel discussion on the relationsh­ip between climate change and heath, Chan said that by 2050, experts predicted that climate change would cause an additional 250,000 deaths each year, just from malaria, diarrhea, heat stress, and under-nutrition.

“Droughts, floods, wildfires and heat waves claimed human lives. The world could not afford not to take open action. Holding countries accountabl­e for their climate policies was also a matter of fairness,” she noted, adding that for public health, climate change had become the defining issue for the 21st century.

Since the impact of climate change was universal, unpredicta­ble, and sometimes contested, she said, human beings were unquestion­ably the most important species threatened by climate change.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on figure has showed that the year 2015 was the hottest year since records began in 1880, and this year was predicted to be even hotter.

“Droughts threatened already perilous food supplies, especially in poor countries where subsistenc­e farming was rain-fed,” Chan stressed.

According to the UN official, the scale of this threat was immense. In some countries more than 70 percent of the population depended on subsistenc­e farming for livelihood. Outbreaks of cholera thrived under too much or too little water. Insects and other carriers of disease were very sensitive to heat, humidity and rainfall. Climate change had given dengue a vastly expanded geographic­al range and could do the same for malaria.

“More than half of the world population lived in an area where Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the principal vector for Zika, dengue, and chikunguny­a, were present. The warming temperatur­es threatened to expand this geographic­al range even further,” Chan warned.

All these consequenc­es for health made the first global climate change agreement reached in Paris last year not just an environmen­t but a health treaty as well, and human rights obligation­s, standards and principles had the power to shape policies for climate change mitigation and adaptation, she said.

According to her, one of the biggest barriers that stood in the way of realizing the right to health was poverty.

“The poorest households in the world were forced to rely on the most polluting energy sources just for everyday cooking. Use of these energy sources, which caused heavy indoor air pollution, was associated with more than 3.5 million deaths each year,” she said.

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