Hotter Planet Already Poses Fatal Risks, Health Experts Warn
Rising temperatures and environmental pollutants are already endangering the health and well-being of Americans, with fatal consequences for thousands of older men and women, a team of public health experts warned Wednesday. Their report, , called on lawmakers to stem the rise of planet-warming gases in the next five years. The presents now, rather than a hazard faced by future generations. It points to the immediate dangers of extreme heat, wildfires and air pollution, and makes the case for rapidly shifting to a green economy as a way to improve public health. The coronavirus pandemic, the authors point out, has served as a reminder of the urgent need to strengthen the countrys system something thats going to be all the more necessary for Americans to deal with the health effects of climate change, which, the authors conclude, disproportionately harm those with the fewest resources to respond to threats. The overarching theme I stress to the incoming administration is making health central, said Dr. Renee N. Salas, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and lead author of the United States policy paper contained in The Lancet report, in a call with reporters. Climate action is a prescription for health. The report contains a set of broad recommendations aimed squarely at the incoming presidential administration. To improve the health of Americans, the authors recommend ending subsidies for fossil fuels, investing in public transit options, and reducing the use of nitrogen fertilizers on American farms, which are a source of both air pollution and planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions. We have to stop investing in what is a thing of the past and health-harming, Dr. Salas said. The report summarizes the research on how rising temperatures and more frequent, more intense heat waves in particular are already damaging human health around the world. In the last 20 years, the report finds, theres been a 50 percent increase in heat-related deaths among people older than 65, with 296,000 deaths in 2018. Most of those deaths were in Japan, China, India and parts of Europe. Extreme heat also makes it hard to work, especially outdoors. According to the report, 302 billion hours of potential labor productivity were lost in 2019 alone. Workers in hot, humid countries like India and were most affected. In the last 20 years there were also more days when the risk of wildfires was high. Fires have grown bigger and more severe in landscapes like the Western United States, destroying four million acres in California alone so far this year. The number of days when there is wildfire smoke in the air have risen sharply, too. The Lancet Countdown on Climate Change and Health, as the paper is formally known, is published each year by the medical journal. Wednesdays edition was the fifth and was written by experts from more than 35 research institutions all over the world. The report found that climates suitable for infectious diseases had expanded, with areas ripe for dengue-spreading mosquitoes having grown by 15 percent since the 1950s. It pointed to worrying signs on food security as well. Between 1981 and 2019, the report found, the yield potential for several staple crops has dropped, meaning that crops are maturing faster and production is lower than average. The largest drops have been for maize, a staple in parts of Africa and Latin America. The world still produces enough food, though it doesnt always go to the people who need it most. The Lancet Countdown calls on national governments to make drastic reductions in emissions in the next five years. Without them, its authors say, it will be increasingly difficult to avert the worst effects of warming. These next five years will be pivotal, the authors wrote. The United Nations concluding that governments must reduce the production of fossil fuels by 6 percent a year over the next 10 years to limit catastrophic warming. is an international climate correspondent. She has also covered the Middle East, West Africa and South Asia for The Times and received the 2003 George Polk Award for her work in Congo, Liberia and other conflict zones.