While Australian councils are teaming up to fight climate change, on the other side of the world there are fears that UK local bodies may be falling behind with calls for a more united front from government.
Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge, sits in the UK’s upper House of Lords and on the Committee on Climate Change, which provides independent advice to the government on building a low carbon economy and preparing for climate change.
“Government is not yet addressing adequately all the climate risks it has itself identified as critical – including surface flooding and the impacts of high temperatures on health,” she says.
The committee’s 2019 report calls for more joined-up thinking from government, not only to reach net-zero emissions targets but to meet the needs of businesses and individuals alike.
Problems for people – and governments
Medical professionals are also calling for the government and national health service (NHS) to do more to mitigate the effects of climate change on health.
Nicky Philpott, UK Health Alliance on Climate Change (UKHACC) director, gives pollution as an example. She tells Government News: “People in socio-economically deprived groups are more adversely affected by pollution; they are more likely to live in areas where pollution levels exceed legal limits and less likely to be able to easily access specialist healthcare.”
Extreme weather events like floods, storms or heatwaves damage infrastructure and healthcare facilities and services. Social needs and behaviour can also be affected and influence health.
About 40,000 people a year die from air-pollution related causes alone in the UK each year, with health inequalities in general costing the NHS £20 billion ($AU36 billion) a year, she notes.
“Many drivers of climate change – fossil fuel combustion, unhealthy diets and poorly designed cities which make us reliant on cars rather than active transport – harm our health directly, through air pollution, high saturated fat intake or physical inactivity,” Philpott explains.
“Tackling climate change is an unprecedented opportunity to improve public health. It depends on embedding actions on climate change and sustainable development in policies across all sectors and everything we do.”
NHS England released its long-term action plan for the next five years in June, covering the changes it envisages to meet its goals within budget constraints.
Beyond halving its own carbon footprint by 2025, one key program is Healthy New Towns, connecting 12 developers of some 70,000 new homes with a set of principles for designing a healthier built environment. These principles will also be embedded into local authorities’ planning guidance ...
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