11/07/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/07/2024 18:27
As the global climate crisis escalates, its devastating impacts on human health and well-being will also accelerate. No one anywhere around the globe is beyond its reach, though millions of people - notably, women, children, older adults, communities of marginalized identity, displaced persons, people with pre-existing health conditions, and those living in poverty - are among the most vulnerable.
Changing climate conditions are altering burdens of disease, including by increasing heat-related illnesses and deaths; shifting the patterns of infectious disease transmission, making deadly disease outbreaks and pandemics more likely; worsening maternal and child health outcomes; and intensifying health impacts from extreme weather events such as floods, droughts, wildfires, and windstorms.
Climate change also exerts significant strains on health systems, simultaneously increasing demand for health services while impairing the system's ability to respond. Furthermore, the climate crisis is rapidly deteriorating access to basic human needs such as food security, safe drinking water and sanitation, and clean air. The result, according to new World Bank data, is that a changing climate could lead to excess health costs in low- and middle-income countries of at least US$15 trillion by 2050, equivalent to approximately 1.2 percent of their projected GDP.
Unabated climate change is also expected to make the global goal of poverty reduction even more challenging to reach. A recent World Bank study estimates that climate change may push an additional 132 million people (more than half of whom live in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia), into extreme poverty by 2030, with 44 million of these driven by health impacts.
The extent to which current and future generations will be impacted by the climate crisis depends on the choices we make today. In collaboration with partners, the World Bank is committed to supporting countries' efforts to respond to the greatest health challenge humanity faces. |
As the largest climate financier, and the biggest funder of health systems, the World Bank is committed to increasing its investments in climate-health action. Through its Climate and Health Program, it is integrating climate considerations through its $30 billion health portfolio which is already active in over 100 countries.
The World Bank is supporting countries to:
The World Bank has already made significant climate-related health investments across more than 100 countries - of which nearly three-fifths have been allocated for adaptation interventions such as urgent nutrition support, surveillance systems, and emergency response centers. For example: