
Starting tomorrow at the 79th World Health Assembly in Geneva, a high-level commission will formally urge the World Health Organization to declare the climate crisis a global public health emergency.
The Pan-European Commission on Climate and Health argues this classification would trigger the same level of coordinated international response used during viral pandemics. Supporters suggest governments should regulate fossil fuels as strictly as tobacco, viewing them as a primary driver of respiratory and cardiovascular mortality. By reframing climate change as a clinical medical crisis rather than just an environmental shift, experts hope to unlock vast new streams of emergency healthcare funding.
The WHO is now tasked with deciding if environmental degradation legally meets the criteria for an 'emergency of international concern' during this week's summit.
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