India is under-prepared to prevent, mitigate or treat the health effects of climate change.
By continuing to support fossil fuels and failing to do enough to adapt to the changing climate, countries including India are endangering the health of their citizens, as well as leaving them at risk of widespread food and water shortages and extreme weather, the report has pointed out. Independent Indian experts we interviewed said that the findings of the study should act as an urgent call for the country, with 270 million people counted as living below the poverty line, to adopt mitigation measures.
Diseases on the rise
Climate change, and the resultant rising temperatures and altered rainfall patterns, are creating ideal conditions for transmission of infectious disease, the report said, adding that this could undo decades of progress to control diseases such as dengue fever, chikungunya, Zika, malaria and cholera. The report has also warned of more deaths, crop failures, mental health problems, pregnancy complications and heat- and humidity-related morbidity.
Droughts, food insecurity
India has been experiencing widespread drought every year since 2015, with the exception of 2017, IndiaSpend reportedin April 2019. In 2019, about 42% of land area was facing drought in India, according to a drought monitoring platform, and failed monsoon rains were the primary reason for the situation.
Low- and middle-income countries and vulnerable communities, including children, older populations, socio-economically poor communities, and those with underlying health problems, are most at risk from climate change. For instance, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh lost 216-261 hours of potential work per employed person due to heat exposure, against the moderate global average of 88 work hours, in 2020.
"Changing climate patterns are favourable for vector-borne diseases and will impact parts of countries that have not seen this trend before like the upper regions of the Himalayas and northeast India," said Prabhakaran.
Heat wave no 'disaster' in India
The National Health Mission developed the National Action Plan for Climate Change and Human Health in 2018, with the aim to strengthen health preparedness and response at the central, state and district levels, PHFI's Prabhakaran said. Currently, it is developing an implementation framework at the national level, to be disseminated to states to use as a template for plans appropriate for their own vulnerabilities.
In India, heatwaves are not even recognised as a disaster under the disaster management law, depriving it of the government's disaster response fund for building relief and resilience and creating early warning infrastructure.
Push for polluting fuels continues
Countries that are already at risk, like India, are not responding effectively to their need to transition to clean energy, Marina Romanello, the lead author of the report, told IndiaSpend. "Countries that followed effective decarbonisation pathways, like phasing out coal and [ensuring] better regulation of air pollution, saw a lower impact on health," she said.
Despite countries' pledges to transition to renewables under the Paris Agreement of 2015, of the 84 countries reviewed for the report, 65 provided subsidies to fossil fuels in 2018. In many cases, these subsidies equalled a substantial proportion of the national health budget.
In September 2019, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres urged countries to end coal subsidies and not build coal plants after 2020. While countries around the world were shunning coal-powered plants in favour of comparatively inexpensive renewable energy, India pushed for private investment in polluting coal, we reported in June 2020.
Only 5% of rural households in countries faring badly on the Human Development Index used clean fuels for cooking in 2019, relying heavily on biofuels instead, the report said. Exposure to these harmful air pollutants in homes resulted in an estimated 6.67 million deaths globally in 2019.
Window for change
The pandemic initiated a health and climate change engagement at the international level when world leaders called for coordinated action on the climate crisis and vaccine inequity at the UN assembly in September 2021. Urgent action on climate mitigation and universal access to clean energy could prevent millions of deaths annually from reduced exposure to air pollution and healthier diets, while contributing to reducing health inequities globally, the report noted.
To address the health consequences of climate change disasters, India must increase its health spending to 2.5% of its gross domestic product, we reported in August 2020.
India spent Rs 1,657 per capita on health in 2017-18, according to the National Health Profile 2019, but health experts estimated that it should be spending closer to Rs 4,000 per head to cope with the additional pressures of climate change. India is also short on healthcare practitioners: The country has 778 physicians per million population as opposed to an ideal of 1,000, according to the World Health Organization.
"We require commitment from government agencies and finances to strengthen public health infrastructure and workforce. And we need intersectional responses across ministries, not limited to the health or environment ministry," said PHFI's Prabhakaran.
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