Today, Forum for the Future, Bupa, Haleon, Reckitt and
Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) have launched updated guidance for
companies on how to urgently tackle mounting threats to human health from the
climate crisis.
Titled Driving Co-benefits for Climate and Health — 2022 Update: How the
private sector can accelerate progress, the new report
updates guidance
originally published in November
2021 and
continues to highlight that planetary health and human health are intrinsically
linked. A healthy planet is a key foundation for a healthy population; and human
health cannot be advanced without fresh water, clean air and a stable climate.
The report aims to enable businesses to leverage their climate and health
strategies in a way that simultaneously accelerates change across these
interlinked challenges.
“Put simply, people cannot thrive on a dying planet,” says Forum for the Future
Chief Executive Dr Sally Uren. “Across the globe, we’re seeing heatwaves of
unprecedented severity, droughts destroying crops and food supplies, escalating
air pollution, devastating wildfires and floods. [Last year], we put the
spotlight on the urgent need for the private sector to step up with integrated
net-zero strategies capable of delivering co-benefits for climate and health.
Since then, some progress has been made — but not enough. This latest guidance
will enable key actors to act faster and go further.”
Distilling the findings of over 5,000 multi-disciplinary papers and developed
with input from businesses, NGOs, scientists, philanthropists and government
advisors from across Europe, Africa and the US, the report
recommends that:
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All businesses can: reduce their emissions and contribute towards
cleaner air; invest in clean, green, safe buildings (new or retrofit);
educate employees and customers about action they can take themselves;
consider environmental and health outcomes as they design their products;
leverage their influence to advocate for a more socially just and
ecologically regenerative
economy;
collaborate with their suppliers on carbon reduction, protecting
biodiversity
and developing climate-adaptation strategies; engage academia and others to
develop new business models capable of delivering not only profit, but
social and environmental benefits; and educate their stakeholders on
integrated risks from the climate and health crises.
-
Investors and philanthropists can: recognize that taking a proactive
approach to tackling climate-induced health impacts would realize
significant economic and health co-benefits, while also constituting smarter
risk management; educate themselves on the risks of inaction; and identify
where health can piggyback on, and strengthen, existing market initiatives.
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Policymakers and the public sector can shift how public money (including
subsidies and procurement) is spent — moving beyond ‘do no harm’ towards
net-positive
goals.
They should also integrate their approaches to tackling health, climate and
nature challenges to drive greater return on investment.
Beyond its focus on the role of the finance, political, investment and
philanthropic community, the report also provides a suite of detailed
recommendations for the food, tech, built environment and healthcare sectors —
recognizing their potential for a disproportionately positive impact.
The impacts of climate change on health can be both acute and chronic.
According to the
CDC, severe weather
events such as floods, heat stress or drought can have immediate and devastating
impacts on health; while gradual rises in temperature can have longer-term
impacts, exacerbating both non-communicable and infectious diseases.
Meanwhile, many of the drivers of climate change are also health issues in their
own right. Air pollution from fossil-fuel power
plants,
transport and industry debilitates millions each year; while deforestation
damages water supplies, depletes nutrients in soil and increases the risk of
infectious
diseases.
A 2021 NRDC
report
estimates the financial costs to our health from fossil-fuel-generated air
pollution and climate change surpass $820 billion in health costs each year
in the US alone.
“Tackling climate and health together also offers an opportunity to address
structural inequalities,” Dr. Uren continued. “Those communities most at risk
from climate
impacts
are often those with less access to healthcare. Designing solutions for climate
adaptation that also deliver health benefits could contribute to better equity
for all.”
Healthcare companies have a key role to play in informing other companies about
the impact of climate change on human health, and in influencing them to step up
and take appropriate action.
“Healthcare companies have an important role to play in addressing the climate
crisis,” said Glyn Richards, Group Director of Sustainability for Bupa
Group. “We not only have a responsibility to reduce our own impact on the
environment, but also to play a leadership role and influence others to make
changes too. We know we have a lot of work to do, and we can’t do this alone;
which is why we’re collaborating with partners to accelerate action. We hope
this report will encourage and support others to do the same.”
The World Health Organization estimates that nearly 13 million people die
each
year
from environmentally related health risks; roughly 99
percent
of the world’s population breathe polluted air; and in 2020, 1 in 4
people
lacked access to safely managed drinking water in their homes. Action Against
Hunger estimates more than 3.1 billion
people
don’t have access to enough safe and nutritious food.
“The link between the planet’s health and human health can no longer be
ignored,” says David Croft, Global Head of Sustainability at Reckitt.
“Businesses can help by investing in research and innovation to try to ensure we
stay one step ahead of growing health threats, from water scarcity to
insect-borne diseases, so that brands and products continue to help people
protect themselves. The only way to solve these interconnected crises is by
working together to drive solutions at scale.”
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Nov 9, 2022 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET