Original image: Man at bridge holding head with hands and screaming. By Edvard Munch - WebMuseum at ibiblioPage: http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/munch/Image URL: http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/munch/munch.scream.jpg, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37610298

Claim: Human Health has Already Been Harmed by Climate Change

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

h/t Dr. Willie Soon; According to health journals and activists, grants and debt forgiveness rather than loans are needed to address the crisis of slightly warmer temperatures.

Call for emergency action to limit global temperature increases, restore biodiversity, and protect health

BMJ 2021; 374 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n1734 (Published 06 September 2021)
Cite this as: BMJ 2021;374:n1734

Lukoye Atwoli, editor in chief1,  Abdullah H Baqui, editor in chief2,  Thomas Benfield, editor in chief3,  Raffaella Bosurgi, editor in chief4,  Fiona Godlee, editor in chief5,  Stephen Hancocks, editor in chief6,  Richard Horton, editor in chief7,  Laurie Laybourn-Langton, senior adviser8,  Carlos Augusto Monteiro, editor in chief9,  Ian Norman, editor in chief10,  Kirsten Patrick, interim editor in chief11,  Nigel Praities, executive editor12,  Marcel G M Olde Rikkert, editor in chief13,  Eric J Rubin, editor in chief14,  Peush Sahni, editor in chief15,  Richard Smith, chair8,  Nicholas J Talley, editor in chief16,  Sue Turale, editor in chief17,  Damián Vázquez, editor in chief18

Correspondence to: L Laybourn laurie.laybourn@ukhealthalliance.org

Wealthy nations must do much more, much faster 

The UN General Assembly in September 2021 will bring countries together at a critical time for marshalling collective action to tackle the global environmental crisis. They will meet again at the biodiversity summit in Kunming, China, and the climate conference (COP26) in Glasgow, UK. Ahead of these pivotal meetings, we—the editors of health journals worldwide—call for urgent action to keep average global temperature increases below 1.5°C, halt the destruction of nature, and protect health.

Health is already being harmed by global temperature increases and the destruction of the natural world, a state of affairs health professionals have been bringing attention to for decades.1 The science is unequivocal; a global increase of 1.5°C above the pre-industrial average and the continued loss of biodiversity risk catastrophic harm to health that will be impossible to reverse.23 Despite the world’s necessary preoccupation with covid-19, we cannot wait for the pandemic to pass to rapidly reduce emissions.

Reflecting the severity of the moment, this editorial appears in health journals across the world. We are united in recognising that only fundamental and equitable changes to societies will reverse our current trajectory.

The risks to health of increases above 1.5°C are now well established.2 Indeed, no temperature rise is “safe.” In the past 20 years, heat related mortality among people aged over 65 has increased by more than 50%.4 Higher temperatures have brought increased dehydration and renal function loss, dermatological malignancies, tropical infections, adverse mental health outcomes, pregnancy complications, allergies, and cardiovascular and pulmonary morbidity and mortality.56 Harms disproportionately affect the most vulnerable, including children, older populations, ethnic minorities, poorer communities, and those with underlying health problems.24

Global heating is also contributing to the decline in global yield potential for major crops, falling by 1.8-5.6% since 1981; this, together with the effects of extreme weather and soil depletion, is hampering efforts to reduce undernutrition.4 Thriving ecosystems are essential to human health, and the widespread destruction of nature, including habitats and species, is eroding water and food security and increasing the chance of pandemics.378

The consequences of the environmental crisis fall disproportionately on those countries and communities that have contributed least to the problem and are least able to mitigate the harms. Yet no country, no matter how wealthy, can shield itself from these impacts. Allowing the consequences to fall disproportionately on the most vulnerable will breed more conflict, food insecurity, forced displacement, and zoonotic disease—with severe implications for all countries and communities. As with the covid-19 pandemic, we are globally as strong as our weakest member.

Rises above 1.5°C increase the chance of reaching tipping points in natural systems that could lock the world into an acutely unstable state. This would critically impair our ability to mitigate harms and to prevent catastrophic, runaway environmental change.910

Global targets are not enough

Encouragingly, many governments, financial institutions, and businesses are setting targets to reach net-zero emissions, including targets for 2030. The cost of renewable energy is dropping rapidly. Many countries are aiming to protect at least 30% of the world’s land and oceans by 2030.11

These promises are not enough. Targets are easy to set and hard to achieve. They are yet to be matched with credible short and longer term plans to accelerate cleaner technologies and transform societies. Emissions reduction plans do not adequately incorporate health considerations.12 Concern is growing that temperature rises above 1.5°C are beginning to be seen as inevitable, or even acceptable, to powerful members of the global community.13 Relatedly, current strategies for reducing emissions to net zero by the middle of the century implausibly assume that the world will acquire great capabilities to remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.1415

This insufficient action means that temperature increases are likely to be well in excess of 2°C,16 a catastrophic outcome for health and environmental stability. Critically, the destruction of nature does not have parity of esteem with the climate element of the crisis, and every single global target to restore biodiversity loss by 2020 was missed.17 This is an overall environmental crisis.18

Health professionals are united with environmental scientists, businesses, and many others in rejecting that this outcome is inevitable. More can and must be done now—in Glasgow and Kunming—and in the immediate years that follow. We join health professionals worldwide who have already supported calls for rapid action.119

Equity must be at the centre of the global response. Contributing a fair share to the global effort means that reduction commitments must account for the cumulative, historical contribution each country has made to emissions, as well as its current emissions and capacity to respond. Wealthier countries will have to cut emissions more quickly, making reductions by 2030 beyond those currently proposed2021 and reaching net-zero emissions before 2050. Similar targets and emergency action are needed for biodiversity loss and the wider destruction of the natural world.

To achieve these targets, governments must make fundamental changes to how our societies and economies are organised and how we live. The current strategy of encouraging markets to swap dirty for cleaner technologies is not enough. Governments must intervene to support the redesign of transport systems, cities, production and distribution of food, markets for financial investments, health systems, and much more. Global coordination is needed to ensure that the rush for cleaner technologies does not come at the cost of more environmental destruction and human exploitation.

Many governments met the threat of the covid-19 pandemic with unprecedented funding. The environmental crisis demands a similar emergency response. Huge investment will be needed, beyond what is being considered or delivered anywhere in the world. But such investments will produce huge positive health and economic outcomes. These include high quality jobs, reduced air pollution, increased physical activity, and improved housing and diet. Better air quality alone would realise health benefits that easily offset the global costs of emissions reductions.22

These measures will also improve the social and economic determinants of health, the poor state of which may have made populations more vulnerable to the covid-19 pandemic.23 But the changes cannot be achieved through a return to damaging austerity policies or the continuation of the large inequalities of wealth and power within and between countries.

Cooperation hinges on wealthy nations doing more 

In particular, countries that have disproportionately created the environmental crisis must do more to support low and middle income countries to build cleaner, healthier, and more resilient societies. High income countries must meet and go beyond their outstanding commitment to provide $100bn a year, making up for any shortfall in 2020 and increasing contributions to and beyond 2025. Funding must be equally split between mitigation and adaptation, including improving the resilience of health systems.

Financing should be through grants rather than loans, building local capabilities and truly empowering communities, and should come alongside forgiving large debts, which constrain the agency of so many low income countries. Additional funding must be marshalled to compensate for inevitable loss and damage caused by the consequences of the environmental crisis.

As health professionals, we must do all we can to aid the transition to a sustainable, fairer, resilient, and healthier world. Alongside acting to reduce the harm from the environmental crisis, we should proactively contribute to global prevention of further damage and action on the root causes of the crisis. We must hold global leaders to account and continue to educate others about the health risks of the crisis. We must join in the work to achieve environmentally sustainable health systems before 2040, recognising that this will mean changing clinical practice. Health institutions have already divested more than $42bn of assets from fossil fuels; others should join them.4

The greatest threat to global public health is the continued failure of world leaders to keep the global temperature rise below 1.5°C and to restore nature. Urgent, society-wide changes must be made and will lead to a fairer and healthier world. We, as editors of health journals, call for governments and other leaders to act, marking 2021 as the year that the world finally changes course.

Acknowledgments

This editorial is being published simultaneously in many international journals. Please see the full list here: https://www.bmj.com/content/full-list-authors-and-signatories-climate-emergency-editorial-september-2021

Footnotes

  • Competing interests: We have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and declare the following: FG serves on the executive committee for the UK Health Alliance on Climate Change and is a trustee of the Eden Project. RS is the chair of Patients Know Best, has stock in UnitedHealth Group, has done consultancy work for Oxford Pharmagenesis, and is chair of the Lancet commission on the value of death. 
  • Provenance and peer review: Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt and build upon this work, for commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Read more: https://www.bmj.com/content/374/bmj.n1734

The most absurd claim in this bucket of multiple absurdities is the suggestion slightly warmer temperatures are causing physiological problems.

Humans are tropical apes. Outside the narrow tropical band where we evolved, we need clothes to stay warm. Only in the high tropics is our physiology unstressed enough to survive without artificial assistance, like blankets . As Bjorn Lomborg pointed out last June, any slight rise in heat deaths is more than offset by a reduction in cold related deaths.

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richard
September 7, 2021 6:52 am

I’d say!! The world obesity federation say obesity is now a problem in every country , effecting a third of the world and increasing. Climate change moves in mysterious ways.

Reply to  richard
September 7, 2021 9:14 am

Original Post (O.P.) does not, as I read it, account for the rate of obese individuals who died in their heat classified context. My immediate train of thought is that the small temperature elevation O.P. is concerned with will disproportionately be of physiologically relevance to obese people; and that too as regards their individual age ranges with even additional impact if co-morbidities. [Somewhat like in the current CoVid virus strain hospitalization report recently how the statistically significant majority number are obese & overweight.]

richard
September 7, 2021 6:59 am

 “In the past 20 years, heat related mortality among people aged over 65 has increased by more than 50%.” and the world’s population has increased by a billion +

Bill E
Reply to  richard
September 7, 2021 10:23 am

The fraction of the population which is aged over 65 also increased by about 50% over the last 20 years. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.65UP.TO.ZS

Chaswarnertoo
Reply to  richard
September 7, 2021 10:53 am

Yep. They never adjust for mileage.

whiten
September 7, 2021 7:53 am

It seems to me that lately,
the climateriat line is focusing on bringing up the claim that “climate change” impacts negatively the human mental health.

A bit late to date, but still good enough to cause extra hysteria and panic if unchecked.

Maybe, and hopefully, this is just me imagining this.

cheers

September 7, 2021 8:07 am

Not sure if anyone here would be interested, but Alex Epstein is looking for researchers. From an email:

Breaking: 220+ medical journals have published an absolutely horrific statement calling for the rapid elimination of fossil fuel use in the name of “health.” I just published my comment, beginning with:

Today is a dark day for the medical profession. The editors of 220 medical journals, with 0 expertise in energy and climate, have called for the rapid elimination of fossil fuel use–a course of action that would rapidly increase the biggest cause of health problems: poverty.

In this issue:
·        Seeking resourceful researchers
·        Quick updates

Seeking resourceful researchers

One of the keys to my success is my amazingly knowledgeable and resourceful head researcher, Steffen Henne.

However, even Steffen has limits and we’re finding ourselves in a position where research bandwidth is limiting our ability to create content for the public and for elected officials.

So I’m looking for one or more new highly resourceful energy/environment researchers.

If this interests you or anyone you know, the “application” process is to do a significant portion of one of the following two difficult research assignments. Both of these are projects I’m actually working on, so it’s a perfect test.

“Energy Liars” research

The goal of the “Energy Liars” project is to expose the dishonesty and destructiveness of companies that claim to be “100% renewable.”

There are, unfortunately now hundreds of such companies, with some of the most prominent being Apple, Facebook, and Microsoft.

These companies are major contributors to the fact that our government is pushing for absolutely disastrous, “100% renewable” or “80% clean” policies such as the “Clean Energy Standard.”

I plan on doing dozens of exposés of “energy liars” if we can get enough research help.

The specific research assignment is, for any prominent company that qualifies as an “energy liar”:
·        Document at least 3 public claims to be “100% renewable” or some similar dishonest designation.
·        Document at least 4 major ways in which the company is clearly not “100% renewable.” This can include: the use of fossil fuel power plants, the use of fossil fueled transportation, the use of fossil fueled processing facilities, the use of fossil fueled mining equipment, etc. “Documentation” will, to the extent possible, include official documents, specific numbers, and pictures (such as a tech company’s natural gas generator, grid connection, or fossil fueled supplier).
·        Documentation of company’s leadership and/or Board engaging in activities that use large amounts of fossil fuel.



“Blackout bank” research

The goal of the “Blackout Bank” project is to expose the immorality and destructiveness of financial institutions that are refusing to lend to or otherwise support (e.g., not offer insurance to) fossil fuel projects.

Such “Blackout Banks” are an enormous threat to low-cost, reliable energy in America and around the world—and they should be exposed as such.

The specific research assignment is, for any prominent financial institution that has publicly committed to divesting from fossil fuel projects in the US and/or abroad:
·        Document one of more specific public commitments by the company to divest from fossil fuel projects.
·        Document the destructiveness of the policy to one or more specific vital projects. E.g., documenting how BlackRock is pressuring other firms to withdraw from coal plants in Asia hurts a specific community.
·        Document the “blackout bank’s” leadership and/or Board engaging in activities that use large amounts of fossil fuels.

Note: “Resourcefulness” does not include doing anything illegal.

Note: Research should be presented in a form that is as useful and actionable as possible. The closer to a publishable product you deliver, the better.

—————

To apply to become a part-time or full-time researcher, email your research assignment to me (alex@alexepstein.com) and Steffen (steffen@industrialprogress.net) with the subject “Resourceful Researcher.” Include whether you are interested in part-time or full-time work, and payment/salary expectations.

If anyone not looking for work is interested in sending research for these projects, that’s welcome, as well.

Finally, if any professors would like to give one of these assignments to their students, let me know. If you do this I will be happy to do a free Zoom/discussion Q&A with your students.

Carlo, Monte
September 7, 2021 8:26 am

SARS-2 Mu is the latest threat to the entire world, replacing Delta.

My question:

What happened to the Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda threats?

Or does the CDC/NIH/ETC not know anything about the Greek alphabet?

Neo
September 7, 2021 8:37 am

My life could be more stress free if all the revenue from carbon offsets were sent to a Swiss bank account in my name.

Olen
September 7, 2021 8:55 am

Looking for a grain of salt to make the poison go down a little better.
Collective and China says a lot. If they are so concerned about health the virus might be a place to start in China.

garboard
September 7, 2021 9:19 am

in developed countries people over 65 prefer to move to warm climates to retire . developing countries need more cheap energy

September 7, 2021 9:54 am

An increase of overnight low temperature, and daytime high temperature, of 2C in Antarctica and the Arctic is a health risk?

n.n
September 7, 2021 10:19 am

Genderphobia, anthropophobia, transhumane orientations and wicked solutions, and sociopolitical consensus that adheres to a religion that conflates logical domains for social progress and justice per chance redistributive and retributive change is a first-order forcing of catastrophic anthropogenic cognitive dissonance.

whiten
Reply to  n.n
September 7, 2021 10:41 am

n.n,

what your thoughts are in consideration of climate impacts on human mental health?

Any elaboration there, from you!
🤔

cheers

September 7, 2021 10:39 am

While changing climate doesn’t really have any noticeable effects, Climate Change™ alarmism and propaganda definitely causes stress, anxiety, hysteria, loss of bladder function, and generally lowers IQ levels.

whiten
Reply to  PCman999
September 7, 2021 11:03 am

You ignoring the stark increase of CO2 concentration there.

That is very real and starkly.

A clear indication of some you not seeing and realizing.

Too bad.

cheers

whiten
Reply to  whiten
September 7, 2021 11:32 am

It is amazing.

The most invested guy, in this one particular point,
leif,

is declining to show up.

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  whiten
September 7, 2021 2:21 pm

You ignoring the stark increase of CO2 concentration there.

That is very real and starkly.

A clear indication of some you not seeing and realizing.

Too bad.

cheers

Quiet, people. I think it’s trying to communicate…

whiten
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
September 7, 2021 2:58 pm

thank you Zig Zag, for your kind reply,

but I still got to ask;

is your reply addressed to me, or the other readers here?

sorry but got to ask.

Bruce Cobb
September 7, 2021 11:30 am

The Climate Cluckers, Cacklers, and Caterwaukers are busy gearing up for their humungous CackleFest in Glasgow from Oct. 31 – Nov. 12. The din will only get louder as each try to outdo one another. After all, this is “Code Red” now. Perhaps this will be their Last Hurrah, even. One can only hope. Meanwhile, I suggest high performance ear plugs.

MarkW
September 7, 2021 12:14 pm

Rutgers has a new policy that bans unvaccinated students from taking virtual classes.

https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/rutgers-bars-unvaccinated-student-from-attending-virtual-classes

Reply to  MarkW
September 7, 2021 1:40 pm

Well Mark that’s a terrible thing to put students and parents through. The parents should class-action sue the school for discrimination over lack of solid evidence for the policy – sue for triple damages.

This unnecessary cult-like oppression of innocent people is the beginning of future atrocities.

“Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.” -Voltaire

Today’s absurdities include the belief the vaccines are safe and effective, when many thousands have died from it within days of taking it, some within hours – which the mainstream media don’t report. Also the dubious idea that they are protecting people at all.

100 fully-vaccinated Royal Navy sailors were said to have contracted the virus during a brief stop in Nicosia, Cyprus in late June this summer. Those healthy northern sailors with their vaccines weren’t ready for the intense sunlight in the extreme UV Index range, and likely had sun-sickness:
comment image

Alternative media is replete with such examples among the healthy vaccinated, of people supposedly getting the virus in places that were under prevalent high UVI and/or heat index conditions, with the authorities then blaming the unvaccinated. See the pattern?

From a book by Gregory H. Stanton about the 10 stages of genocide:

1) Classification of problem people
2) Target group clarified, symbolized
3) Discrimination to deny rights
4) Dehumanization via constant propaganda of target group, systemically
5) Organization in place for decades
6) Polarization between masses and targeted group
7) Group separation via reverse psychology
8) Persecution of isolated group, re-education
9) Extermination, victims dehumanized and disposed of
10) Denial of mass discrimination and murders

I don’t see where the claims made by the discriminators would hold up in court, as the entire chain of evidence is missing. What has happened is accusations by politicians, media personalities and megalomaniacs have replaced evidence and facts.

September 7, 2021 1:13 pm

Since wealthy nations “need to do more”, the question that must be asked is: “How did the wealthy nations become wealthy in the first place?”

aussiecol
September 7, 2021 2:26 pm

What absolute garbage. Civilisation as it stands now has a higher life expectancy than ever before in history.

September 7, 2021 5:56 pm

Wealthy nations must do much more, much faster…”

Well that lets the US of A out. By the time we get to the mid-term elections (November 2022) the National Debt will be at least doubled – in other words – really dead-broke.

A trillion here, another trillion there – pretty soon it adds up to – Monopoly money.

James Sherman
September 7, 2021 6:37 pm

Change is the only constant in the universe. Everything goes thru cycles, no matter how small or large. It is the way of nature. Act/react/pause/repeat. Too much co2, more plants grow, reduces co2, less plants grow ad infinitum. Catch Willy Soon. He is a genius. Avoid al gore, as he is a profiteering idiot. The editors of this article, that I did not bother to read could learn a lot from Soon. But they won’t.

Lasse
September 7, 2021 11:57 pm

Air quality is the most important facto for our health.
Indoor air quality is the worst problem.
No we can see how the air quality is improving especially indoors.
Thanks to electrification and fossil fules:
https://ourworldindata.org/air-pollution
Impressing result of fossil use!

Damon
September 8, 2021 12:50 am

Since when have over 65s suffered from ‘pregnancy complications’.

Mike Haseler (aka Scottish Sceptic)
September 8, 2021 4:01 am

They must be talking about the drying of the Savannah and flat feet.

spock
September 8, 2021 4:15 am

Well my hemorrhoids have gotten worse due to climate change.
I demand rich nations force their taxpayers to spend more to help my case of hemorrhoids.