World health leaders urge green recovery from
coronavirus crisis
Open letter to G20 leaders says addressing climate
breakdown key to global revival
Fiona
Harvey Environment correspondent
Published
onTue 26 May 2020 06.00 BST
Doctors and
medical professionals from around the globe have called on world leaders to
ensure a green recovery from the coronavirus crisis that takes account of air
pollution and climate breakdown.
More than
200 organisations representing at least 40 million health workers – making up
about half of the global medical workforce – have signed an open letter to the
G20 leaders and their chief medical advisers, pointing to the 7 million
premature deaths to which air pollution contributes each year around the world.
Chief
medical officers and chief scientific advisers must be directly involved in
designing the stimulus packages now under way, the letter urges, in order to
ensure they include considerations of public health and environmental concerns.
They say public health systems should be strengthened, and they warn of how
environmental degradation could help to unleash future diseases.
The
signatories also want reforms to fossil fuel subsidies, with public support
shifted towards renewable energy, which they say would make for cleaner air,
cut greenhouse gas emissions and help to spur economic growth of nearly $100tn
in the next three decades.
In the
letter, the health professionals link air pollution and fragile public health
systems with the impacts of the virus, saying air pollution “was already
weakening our bodies”, exacerbating the impact of the disease.
“We have
witnessed first-hand how fragile communities can be when their health, food
security and freedom to work are interrupted by a common threat. The layers of
this ongoing tragedy are many and magnified by inequality and under-investment
in public health systems. We have witnessed death, disease and mental distress
at levels not seen for decades,” they write.
Better
preparation could have reduced the impacts from the Covid-19 pandemic,
according to the letter. “We must learn from these mistakes and come back
stronger, healthier and more resilient,” they write.
Studies
have suggested that air pollution may play a role in worsening Covid-19
symptoms or increasing mortality, though scientists also say it is too early to
draw hard conclusions about the full impacts. The clearing skies that have
accompanied lockdown in many countries are under threat, however, as industrial
activity resumes without new safeguards.
Last week a
comprehensive study found daily carbon dioxide emissions around the world had
fallen by about 17% as a result of the lockdowns, and that if normal activity
resumed there would be only about a 4% fall for the full year, compared with
last year. Such a fall would make little difference in the climate crisis.
Some
countries are considering a green recovery from the crisis by attaching stern
conditions to any bailouts for fossil fuel-dependent industries, such as
aviation, and by pumping money into infrastructure that reduces greenhouse
gases, from broadband for remote working to better cycle lanes and electric
vehicle charging points. A recent study from Oxford University found this would
yield more jobs and a better return on public investment than returning to
business as usual.
“Health
professionals are at the frontlines of this emergency, and we are seeing the
immense loss of lives because of acting too late,” said Miguel Jorge, the
president of the World Medical Association. “We know now more than ever that
healthy lives depend on a healthy planet. As we walk on the road to recovery,
we need to build a system that will protect us from further damage. We need a
healthy and green recovery.”
Health
professionals are concerned that the world will resume its unhealthy practices
as the immediate impacts of the coronavirus fade, without learning the lessons
needed to put us on a healthier path that would reduce the likelihood of such
devastating pandemics in future, as well as reducing illness from other causes
and staving off climate breakdown.
“Covid-19
has forced the world to pause and take stock, providing us with a unique
opportunity to make changes that will benefit the planet and all the people on
it,” said Annette Kennedy, president of the International Council of Nurses.
“Climate change poses an imminent and serious threat to the health of the
world’s population. We are calling on governments to make sure that pollution
levels do not return to previous levels, so that our children and grandchildren
will be able to grow up healthily in a liveable and sustainable climate. Only
by investing in both healthcare and the environment can we create a sustainable
future.”
The
signatories include the World Medical Association, the International Council of
Nurses, the Commonwealth Nurses and Midwives Federation, the World Organization
of Family Doctors and the World Federation of Public Health Associations, as
well as thousands of individual health professionals.
The letter
has been sent to all G20 leaders, including Boris Johnson, Angela Merkel and Xi
Jinping, who are under pressure to approve a green recovery, as well as those
who have been criticised for a lax approach to the crisis or for using it to
weaken environmental protections, including Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and
Jair Bolsonaro.
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