The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm Environment Institute and Stockholm University are proud to present the Gordon Goodman Memorial Lecture, to be held by Professor Sir Andy Haines on 15 September. The lecture will focus on a crucial topic: the direct and indirect ways in which climate change impacts human health, and solutions that can yield multiple co-benefits for people and our environment.
Climate change and health: developing evidence for action
Climate change will have far-reaching and potentially catastrophic effects on health, with the largest burden falling on the poor, who have contributed least to emissions. The effects of climate change on health may be direct, for example from extreme heat. Effects can also be mediated through ecosystems, such as changes in the incidence and distribution of vector–borne diseases, including dengue and malaria, or through socioeconomic pathways such as impoverishment and population displacement.
Many policies to cut greenhouse gas emissions can yield near term improvements in human health. Cutting fossil fuel combustion can reduce deaths from ambient air pollution, and increased walking and cycling can reduce both air pollution and the incidence of diseases related to physical inactivity. Providing clean, affordable energy can also reduce deaths from household air pollution. Reduced consumption of animal products in high consuming populations, and increased consumption of fruit, vegetables, and seeds, can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve health. Valuing these co-benefits can make climate policies more attractive to decision makers and incentivise climate action.
Sir Andy Haines is Professor of Environmental Change and Public Health, Centre on Climate Change and Planetary Health, at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Professor Sir Andy Haines currently co-chairs the Inter Academy Partnership (consisting of 140 science academies worldwide) working group on climate change and health and is also co-chairing the Lancet Pathfinder Initiative on health in the zero-carbon economy. He chaired the Scientific Advisory Panel for the 2013 WHO World Health Report, the Rockefeller/Lancet Commission on Planetary Health (2014–15) and the European Academies Science Advisory Council working group on climate change and health (2018–19).
Andy Haines was formerly a primary care physician and Professor of Primary Health Care at London’s Global University. He developed an interest in climate change and health in the 1990s, and was a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for the second and third assessment reports and review editor for the health chapter in the fifth assessment. He was Director (formerly Dean) of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine from 2001–2010. Haines has published many papers on topics such as the effects of environmental change on health and the health co-benefits of low carbon policies. His current research focuses on climate change mitigation, sustainable and healthy food systems and complex urban systems for sustainability.
Agenda
Welcome and introduction
Åsa Persson, Deputy Director, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)
Dan Larhammar, President, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Astrid Söderbergh Widding, President, Stockholm University
Climate change and health: developing evidence for action
Sir Andy Haines, Professor of Environmental Change and Public Health, Centre on Climate Change and Planetary Health, at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
15:40
Panel discussion & audience Q&A
Moderated by: Anders Nordström, Ambassador for Global Health at Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Sweden.
Maria Neira, Director, Public Health and the Environment Department, World Health Organization.
Omnia El Omrani, Liaison Officer for Public Health Issues, International Federation of Medical Students’ Association.
Sarah Dickin, Research Fellow, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) and Co-lead SEI Initiative on Sustainable Sanitation.
Brama Kone, Associate Professor, Lecturer-Researcher of Public Health, the University Peleforo Gon Coulibaly of Korhogo, Côte d’Ivoire & an associate Researcher and Project Leader, the Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques in Côte d’Ivoire.
Johan C.I. Kuylenstierna, Research Leader, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI).
16:25
Concluding remarks
Åsa Persson, Deputy Director, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI).
16:30
Contact
Peter Brandén
Programme Coordinator
program@kva.se