Health responds to net zero announcement

Health groups have responded to the Prime Minister’s net zero by 2050 announcement by calling for more ambitious climate action, including a stronger 2030 target.

The World Federation of Public Health Associations, Public Health Association of Australia, Consumers Health Forum of Australia, and Women’s and Children’s Healthcare Australasia are among 52 health and medical groups that have released an open letter sent to the Prime Minister and Health Minister calling for climate action to protect Australians’ health, as they launch a new health and climate change policy framework to guide governments.

“We want to see health explicitly included in Australia’s commitments under the Paris Agreement,” says Fiona Armstrong, Executive Director of the Climate and Health Alliance.

The health organisations are calling for the government to legislate a 75% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions below 2005 levels by 2030 to reach net zero by 2035, in line with the recommendations of climate scientists.

The call from health groups comes after last week’s MJA-Lancet Countdown report, which issues a “serious health warning” for Australians from heat, bushfires, air pollution and more, and emphasises the disproportionate health burden borne by Indigenous Australians.

“Australia’s action to address the health impacts of climate change has been described as ‘catastrophic for human health’,” says Ms Armstrong. “It is wrong and unnecessary to endanger Australian lives in this way.”

The health effects of Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions are felt beyond its borders, says Dr Liz Hanna, Environmental Health Chair of the World Federation of Public Health Associations. “As the world’s third largest exporter of fossil fuels, Australia is literally digging up the stuff that harms human health across the world.”

“The Australian Government must implement a national climate-health strategy to protect the health of Australians — and all global citizens — from the worsening impacts of climate change,” says Dr Hanna.

The new climate and health policy framework, Healthy, Regenerative and Just, lays out a roadmap that can be progressed into a formalised strategy and implemented by the federal government in cooperation with states and territories to reduce emissions, tackle inequality and improve health through no-regrets policies and initiatives.

“The health and medical community in Australia are calling for action in the strongest possible terms: climate change is a health emergency,” says Ms Armstrong.

 

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