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Climate change 'biggest global health threat,' doctors warn
Paris (AFP) May 13, 2009 Climate change will present the greatest threat to health this century, amplifying the risk of disease, malnutrition and homelessness through floods, drought and rising sea levels, a medical panel said on Thursday. "Even the most conservative estimates are profoundly disturbing and demand action," said the report, compiled over a year by The Lancet medical journal and experts from the Institute for Global Health at University College London. "Climate change is the biggest global health threat of the 21st century." The commission drew much of its data from the landmark Fourth Assessment Report, issued in 2007 by the UN's Nobel-winning climate experts, the Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Changing weather patterns could widen the habitat of disease-bearing mosquitoes, bringing malaria and dengue to previously cold regions, while flooding in poor countries will be a boon for cholera and other water-borne diseases. Indirect effects on health include malnutrition as a result of poor harvests; injury and death from storms; and vulnerability from migration, as populations flee swamped delta cities or civil unrest. "Estimates show that small increases in the risk for climate-sensitive conditions, such as diarrhoea and malnutrition, could result in very large increases in the total disease burden," it said. Poor countries that are least to blame for global warming will be hit most, "a source of historical shame to our generation if nothing is done to address it," the authors said. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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House Democrats near climate bill agreement Washington (AFP) May 13, 2009 Democrats in the US House of Representatives are nearing a compromise on an energy and climate change bill, according to Democratic sources. The sources said Democratic lawmakers, who enjoy majorities in both houses of Congress, reached an agreement late Tuesday on a goal to reduce greenhouse gases by 17 percent from their 2005 levels by 2020. The figure was lower than an initial goal of ... read more |
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