WHO Says Fighting Global Warming a Win-Win To Prevent Health Problems, Save Money

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Countries that start battling global warming now won't have to wait generations to see the rewards: burning cleaner fuels can yield immediate health benefits that save lives and money, world health experts say.

BANGKOK, Thailand -- Countries that start battling global warming now won't have to wait generations to see the rewards: burning cleaner fuels can yield immediate health benefits that save lives and money, world health experts say.


Big developing countries like China and India can play a huge role in improving health by expanding their use of cleaner energy sources, said Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum, a scientist on global environmental change and health at the World Health Organization in Geneva.


"The policy options that you choose to try to cut (carbon dioxide) emissions also have very important health effects," he said by phone. "If you choose the right ones, then you can certainly have a win-win at cutting CO2 emissions and directly benefiting health."


Urban air pollution, for example, kills about 800,000 people a year globally. More than half of those deaths occur in China, the world's second-largest greenhouse gas emitter after the United States.


Promoting walking or bicycling instead of driving could further reduce major health problems like diabetes and heart disease that are striking many rapidly developing countries, Campbell-Lendrumsaid said.


A climate report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a U.N. network of 2,000 scientists, was being hammered out for a fourth day Thursday in Bangkok by delegates from more than 120 countries. A final version was expected by Friday.


Much of the talks have centered around the high cost of promoting greener policies, but WHO experts said governments should consider how much they could save in medical costs by taking measures now to minimize heat waves, disease and water scarcity that will come as temperatures rise.


"Prevention is cheaper than cure," said Hisashi Ogawa, regional adviser for healthy settings and environment at the WHO's regional Western Pacific office in Manila. "Disease and deaths will occur, but the economy will be affected because sick people cannot produce services and products, so GDP will go down."


Mosquito-borne illnesses like dengue fever are expected to spike with rising temperatures, in addition to diseases caused by diarrhea that are associated with flooding. Malnutrition from lower crop yields also is predicted to plague the developing world along with disease and injury from heat waves, storms and droughts, according to an earlier IPCC report released in April.


The problems are not decades away _ they're already here, the scientists said. The WHO conservatively estimated that 150,000 people died worldwide in 2000 from health issues related to climate change, with nearly 90 percent of those fatalities in Asia and Africa. The figures do not include deaths linked to air pollution.


An ongoing outbreak of malaria in Papua New Guinea, which shares an island north of Australia with Indonesia's easternmost Papua province, has been blamed on global warming because mosquitoes that spread the disease were never able to breed in the highland's cool climate. Rising temperatures have changed that, Ogawa said.


Asian cities also are among the most at risk worldwide for rising sea levels, according to a study published in March in the journal Environment and Urbanization. Three-quarters of all people living in vulnerable areas are in Asia _ China, India, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Indonesia have the largest populations residing in endangered coastal areas. Between 1994 and 2004, half of all people killed by flooding worldwide were living in Asia.


"The projections are overwhelmingly negative," Kristi Ebi, an epidemiologist in Virginia said by telephone. She was the lead author on the earlier health chapter for the IPCC. "Most of these diseases and health outcomes we worry about, we've dealt with before. The question is how to get everything in place as quickly as possible to reduce these impacts now."


She said poor countries, mainly in Asia and Africa, will be forced to bear the brunt of damage already caused by rising temperatures.


Countries can start working to reduce the impact of climate change on health by revving up resources to tackle existing diseases that are expected to worsen, Campbell-Lendrum said.


"We know that the climate is changing. That's no longer in dispute. We also know that many of our largest current health burdens are highly sensitive to climatic conditions," he said. "It's not something that we can just ignore."


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Source: Associated Press


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