COP29 special report on climate and health: health is the argument for climate action
Developed by WHO in collaboration with over 100 organizations and 300 experts, the COP29 special report on climate change and health identifies critical policies across three integrated dimensions - people, place and planet. The report outlines key actions aiming to protect all people, particularly the estimated 3.6 billion people who live in areas which are most susceptible to climate change. The report underlines the importance of the governance that integrates health in climate policy-making - and climate in health policy-making - being essential for progress.
Top recommendations include:
- make human health and well-being the top measure of climate success to catalyse progress and ensure people-centred adaptation and resilience;
- end fossil fuel subsidies and reliance by realigning economic and financial systems to protect both people's health and the environment, through investment in clean, sustainable alternatives that reduce pollution-related diseases and cut carbon emissions;
- mobilize financing for climate-health initiatives, particularly to strengthen responsive health systems and support the health workforce, creating resilient, climate-proof health systems to protect health and save lives;
- invest in proven solutions; just 5 interventions - from heat-health warning systems, to clean household energy, to efficient pricing of fossil fuels - would save almost 2 million lives a year, and bring US$ 4 in benefits for each dollar invested;
- build greater focus on the role of cities in health outcomes, through more sustainable urban design, clean energy, resilient housing, and improved sanitation; and
- increase protections for and restoration of nature and biodiversity, recognizing the synergistic health benefits of clean air, water and food security.