INTERNATIONAL HEALTH ORGANIZATIONS CALL FOR FOSSIL FUEL NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY TO PROTECT LIVES OF CURRENT AND FUTURE GENERATIONS
14 September 2022 - The World Health Organization, the International Pediatric Association, the World Medical Association, the Alliance of Nurses for a Healthy Environment, and the World Federation of Public Health Associations are amongst the more than 192 signatories of a letter that demands that governments lay out a legally binding global plan to phase out fossil fuel use.
“The modern addiction to fossil fuels is not just an act of environmental vandalism. From the health perspective, it is an act of self-sabotage”, said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization.
Comparable to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the proposed Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty would be an evidence-based international agreement to control a category of substances well-known to be harmful to human health: coal, oil and gas. The health risks associated with burning these fossil fuels are numerous and present severe threats to human and planetary health. Several other sectors have called for such a treaty including cities and faith organizations across the world. The letter was initiated by the Global Climate and Health Alliance, and Physicians for Social Responsibility with the support of the World Health Organization, the WHO-Civil Society Working Group on Climate and Health and Health Care Without Harm.
“Rapid progress towards net zero emissions is essential to protect health in the face of escalating impacts of climate change. The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty has great potential to accelerate the pace and scale of climate action for health”, said Sir Andy Haines, Professor of Environmental Change and Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
“We know that emissions have to be slashed to limit warming to safe levels, we know fossil fuels are the greatest driver of emissions, and we know that phasing out fossil fuels is the only way to reap many of the health co-benefits of climate mitigation - so why then are governments permitting new drilling, new mining and new pipelines?”, said Liz Hanna, RN, PhD, Chair for Environmental Health of the World Federation of Public Health Associations. “The science on this is clear: new fossil fuel development is completely incompatible with a healthy climate and a healthy future”.
"The two overriding issues of our era--the climate crisis and the danger of nuclear war--are deeply intertwined. The climate crisis is leading to greater international conflict and a growing risk of nuclear war, and nuclear war will cause catastrophic, abrupt climate disruption. The world must come together to prevent both of these existential threats”, said Ira Helfand, MD Immediate Past President, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, the recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize.
“It’s plain to see why we need a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty: fossil fuels are not just toxic to people’s health - every stage of the fossil fuel cycle puts people’s health at risk, from mining and fracking to transport through pipelines, to processing and finally to burning fossil fuels for transport, electricity, and industrial use”, said Jeni Miller, Executive Director of the Global Climate and Health Alliance. “For decades we’ve depended on the capacity of fossil fuels to provide energy, but we now have alternatives that are cleaner and more sustainable – and compatible with the healthier future we want ”.
“Access to clean energy is vital for lifting people out of poverty, supporting economic development, delivering education and health care, and many other determinants of health” Clean energy alternatives to burning fossil fuels exist, but many countries do not have the means and technical expertise to make the transition”, said Miller. “High income countries have benefited from the last hundred plus years of fossil fuel use. These countries have the resources and moral responsibility not only to make the clean energy transition, but to support developing countries to do the same, so that we can phase out poverty and health inequities while ending dependency on fossil fuels.”
“While the energy transition cannot be delayed, we also cannot leave behind the communities and workers that currently depend on fossil fuel jobs”, said Miller. “Governments need to put in place solutions that enable workers and communities to transition into a clean energy economy that supports a healthy and sustainable future, with local communities at the table to help define the shape those solutions take”.
“Air pollution kills over 7 million people a year worldwide, while over 90% people in the world live in places that exceed World Health Organization limits for air pollution. Phasing out fossil fuels would prevent 3.6 million air pollution deaths per year, an immense near-term health benefit to achieve the steps essential to mitigating climate change in the long term”, continued Miller.
“Fossil fuels are a key driver of climate change and pollution - affecting people worldwide but most insidiously vulnerable populations and low- and middle-income countries that suffer from higher exposure. The phase out of fossil fuels is the single most important public health intervention we can achieve”, said Diana Picon Manyari, International Climate Director of Health Care Without Harm. “As public health advocates and health professionals we recognize our role in ensuring that the health sector commits to lowering its own reliance on fossil fuels, while also advocating for a just transition into healthy, clean energy.
“We are thrilled to see health professionals step out of their operating rooms, clinics and offices to support the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty for the sake of people and the planet, alongside a growing chorus of heads of government, Nobel laureates, leading academics and civil society. The world is waking up to the reality of the climate crisis which is inextricably tied to millions of lives and their health. It’s time for world leaders to meet the bar for climate leadership by working together to end the fossil fuel era in a way that is fair and fast” said Harjeet Singh, Global Engagement Director of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative.
"As health professionals, we are struggling to protect the health of our communities from the impacts of climate change already here”, said Laalitha Surapaneni, practicing internal medicine physician and national board member of Physicians for Social Responsibility. “Leaving fossil fuels in the ground, where they belong, is a common sense public health measure. A rapid, just transition away from fossil fuels is an investment in health equity. For my patients, clean air is medicine, and the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, the prescription."
“Pediatricians work hard to save lives”, said Ruth A. Etzel, MD, Co-Chair of the International Pediatric Association’s Environmental Health Strategic Advisory Group. “We have an ethical duty of care, and we cannot stay silent about the global health risks that fossil fuels represent. Our message to government leaders around the world is this: The health of everyone alive today, and of future generations, depends on phasing out fossil fuels, rapidly, justly, and completely.”
“Nursing professionals have become increasingly vocal about the lives that are at stake if we fail to address climate change, and about the impacts on public health with multiple mortalities around the world that they are already seeing - caused by climate change. We welcome the call to fully turn the page on fossil fuels, and are joining the chorus calling for a Treaty to make this happen”, said Pastor Peters Omoragbon, of the Executive President Nurses Across the Borders Humanitarian Initiative, and Convener, UNFCCC HEALTHNGOS Caucus.
“Replacing fossil fuels with sustainable clean energy can bring massive health benefits; these go well beyond reducing the health impacts of climate change”, said Roland Sapsford, CEO of the Climate and Health Alliance in Australia. “Localized solar power can help remote clinics, hospitals, and communities access clean affordable energy. Replacing fossil fuel driven heating and cooking with clean, renewable options can massively improve indoor air quality. Energy efficiency measures can make buildings safer, healthier, and more livable.”
“Around the world, mining, processing and distribution of fossil fuels affects the health of those on low incomes and indigenous communities more than others. Phasing out fossil fuels can improve health for all, while also making our world more equitable”, added Sapsford.
“The burdens and harms caused by our fossil fuel dependence affect us all, but these are not carried equally”, said Katie Huffling, a nurse-midwife and Executive Director of the Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments. “Communities and countries with the least historical responsibility for climate change are experiencing its greatest health impacts, while fossil fuel drilling, mining and processing disproportionately take place in low income and disadvantaged communities around the world. Done right, the urgently needed transition to a clean energy future can also be a transition to a more equitable future”.
“We saw twice as many emergency room visits for asthma over two and a half months in 2014, after our subarctic city of Yellowknife was ringed by severe wildfires” said Dr Courtney Howard, Emergency Physician in the subarctic, Co-Chair for advocacy of the WHO-Civil Society Working Group and Past-President of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment. “Two years later, the hospital in Fort McMurray - the heart of oil sands country - had to be evacuated due to wildfire. You can still see burned trees from that Emergency Room parking lot. To be healthy, our patients need a stable climate as well as employment that helps them house, feed, and support their families. We need to have conversations with people living in resource-dependent communities to ask fossil fuel workers about what supports they need in order to transition to putting their skills to work in the low-carbon economy that all of our children need for a healthy future”, she continued.
"The same way as the fossil fuels circle affects people's health, it negatively impacts the health of ecosystems and damages biodiversity, where human health is also sustained”, said Dr. Paola Rava - coordinator of the health and environment working group of CIMF (Confederación Iberoamericana de medicina de familia). “It can lead to the displacement of rural populations, in many cases also to aggression against the indigenous population, and impoverishment of already vulnerable countries. Eliminating fossil fuels will push agro-industrial food production systems, a major source of emissions, towards agro-ecological systems that favor life and health for the entire planet. Let us think for human health, let us act for Planetary Health!"
“Our unhealthy addiction to fossil fuels accelerates global heating and aggravates air pollution, leaving everyone with a huge and growing health bill”, says Anne Stauffer, Deputy Director at the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL). “It is high time for decision-makers around the globe to take to heart the health prescription, by rapidly adopting measures to end the production and burning of fossil fuels, including a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty.”
“A just, healthy and rapid transition away from fossil fuels to cleaner, more sustainable energy sources is imperative both for human and planetary health”, said Poornima Prabhakaran, MD, Director of the Centre for Environmental Health at the Public Health Foundation of India. “The entire life cycle of fossil fuels from mining, fracking, combustion and disposal of end products is fraught with health hazards. A fossil fuel non - proliferation treaty will provide critical and timely impetus to our efforts to address air pollution and the climate crisis. Safeguarding the lives and livelihoods of communities involved in coal-mining must also receive due attention”.
"The impact of fossil fuels on health is increasing with millions of families losing their father, mother, sister, brother, son or daughter prematurely”, said Dr Lwando Maki, Public Health Medicine Specialist and Internal Medicine doctor from South Africa. “There is a need for governments globally to look at putting plans to address the use of fossil fuels; these plans will factor in development and economy but there must be an endpoint; no one wants to lose their family due to the impact of fossil fuels."
Dr Richard Smith, Chair of the UK Health Alliance on Climate Change, said: "Emergency action is needed to limit global temperature increases, restore biodiversity and protect health. Greenhouse gases produced through the burning of fossil fuels are the main cause of global warming and pollution, with devastating consequences for health. Large-scale, rapid transition away from all fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy will both lower pollution while also slowing down climate change, achieving a double benefit for planetary health. We cannot continue to ignore the problem."
“It is critical and absolutely urgent to take all steps needed to ensure a rapid cut out of fossil fuels and a shift toward resources that preserve our health and protect us against the detrimental impacts of climate change. Cutting down fossil fuels is never enough and that is why a cut out should be the way forward. The IFMSA believes that our duty of care not only includes the future of our individual patients, but also that of communities locally, nationally and globally. Therefore, the IFMSA acknowledges the direct attribution of human activity, including the fossil fuel industry, to climate change, and the urgent threat climate change poses to global health and, with COP27 in just a few weeks, we call on all relevant stakeholders to rapidly divest from fossil fuels and immediately withdraw fossil subsidies, in order to limit the crisis of climate change to ensure a healthier and sustainable future for all”, said Mohamed Eissa, Liaison Officer for Public Health Issues, International Federation of Medical Students’ Associations, representative Egyptian Medical Students’ Association.
ORGANIZATION SIGNATORIES
*Signatories are updated on a rolling basis.
GLOBAL
World Health Organization
BYCS
Environmental Physiotherapy Association
European Health Psychology Society
European Union of Medical Specialists
Global Climate & Health Alliance
Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education
Health Care Without Harm
International Council of Nurses
International Council of Psychologists
International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO)
International Federation of Medical Students' AssocIations
International Pediatric Association
International Pharmaceutical Students' Federation
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
International Primary Care Respiratory Group
International Society for Children's Health and Environment
International Society for Social Pediatrics and Child Health
International Society of Doctors for the Environment, ISDE
Médecins du Monde International Network
People's Health Movement
Planetary Health Report Card Initiative
Psychology Coalition of NGOs at the United Nations
Vital Strategies
World Federation of Public Health Associations
World Heart Federation
World Medical Association
ARGENTINA
Alianza Clima Vida y Salud Internacional
FLACSO (Latin American School of Social Sciences)
Movimiento Laudato Si' - Capítulo Argentina
Fundacion Cardiologica Argentina
AUSTRALIA
Australasian Society of Lifestyle Medicine
Australian Federation of Medical Women
Australian Health Promotion Association
Climate and Health Alliance
Doctors for the Environment Australia
Healthy Futures
BELGIUM
Fédération des maisons médicales
Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL)
Health for Future Belgium
Health for Future - Belgium vzw
Intergroupe liégeois des maisons médicales asbl
BRAZIL
ACT Health Promotion
Health Hospitals Project
BULGARIA
Association Air for Health
CANADA
Canadian Association of Nurses for the Environment/Association des infirmiers et infirmières pour l'environment
Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment
Canadian Climate Psychiatry Alliance
Canadian Health Association for Sustainability and Equity (CHAE)
Canadian Public Health Association / Association canadienne de santé publique
Canadian Society of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
Climate Emergency Institute
Doctors for Planetary Health - West Coast
Dr. K. Goodall, psychological services, prof. Corp.
Faculty Club, University of Toronto
Grand(m)others Act to Save the Planet GASP
Naturopathic Doctors for Environmental and Social Trust
Ontario Public Health Association
Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario
Synergie Santé Environnement
West Elgin Community Health Centre
CHILE
Agrupación de enfermeras ecologistas
Colegio Médico Araucanía
Colegio Médico de Chile A.G.
Comite de Salud Ambiental Infantil-Chile
Cuadernos Mèdico Sociales
Laboratorio de Cambio Social, Ciudad Viva-Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
COLOMBIA
ANHE Latinoamérica
ESE Hospital Universitario de Santander
Fundación Clínica Infantil Club Noel
COSTA RICA
Asociación Proyecto Camino Verde
Centro Latinoamericano de Excelencia en Cambio Climático y Salud
CZECH REPUBLIC
Doctors for Future, Czech republic (Lékaři za budoucnost, Česká republika)
FINLAND
Lääkärin sosiaalinen vastuu, Physicians for Social Responsibility – Finland (PSR Finland)
The Filipino Nurses Association in the Nordic Region
FRANCE
Alliance Santé Planétaire
CHU La Réunion
GAMBIA
Mbolo Association
GERMANY
Arbeitskreis Plastik und Nachhaltigkeit in der Dermatologie (APN)
Bundesärztekammer
Bundesvertretung der Medizinstudierenden in Deutschland e. V. (bvmd)
Deutsche Allianz Klimawandel und Gesundheit - KLUG - e.V.
Deutscher Pflegerat
Fraktion Gesundheit in der Ärztekammer Berlin
German Association of Epidemiology (DGEpi)
German Public Health Association
German Society of Surgery
Gesellschaft für Kinder- und Jugendrheumatologie / German Society of Pediatric Rheumatology
Global Climate Psychology For a Just Future
Health for Future
Health for Future Hamburg
Health for Future Münster
Global and Planetary Health working group, Institute for Medical Epidemiology, Biometrics and Informatics, Martin-Luther-University, Halle (Saale), Germany
Health for Future Aachen
Pan African Health Systems Network
Pharmacists for Future
Stiftung Gesunde Erde - Gesunde Menschen
VBMC ValueBasedManagedCare GmbH
GHANA
AbibiNsroma Foundation
GUINÉE
Carbone Guinée
INDIA
AIHMS-Global
Edward & Cynthia Institute of Public Health, India
Environment and child health group CIAP
Environment & Child Health Group, Indian Academy of Pediatrics
Healthy Energy Initiative - India (The Other Media)
Indian Institute for Peace Disarmament & Environmental Protection
Lung Care Foundation
Maharashtra Academy Of Pediatricians
MMBSHS Trust
Navi Mumbai Association Of Pediatrics
Public Health Foundation of India
SGA on environment and child health IPA
VIKASH-SAMUKHYA
Vydehi institute of dental sciences and research Center
Warrior Moms India
INDONESIA
Yayasan Alam Sehat Lestari
IRELAND
Irish Doctors for the Environment
Irish Global Health Network
Irish Society of Specialists in Public Health Medicine (ISSPHM)
Ryan Institute, University of Galway
Society for Social Medicine and Population Health
ITALY
A.N.G.E.V. OdV - Sede Operativa
ISDE, Associazione Medici per l'Ambiente Italia
CNAI Italian Nurses Association
European Confederation of Primary Care Pediatricians
JAPAN
Health and Global Policy Institute
JORDAN
Dibeen For Environmental Development
KENYA
Africa Climate and Health Alliance
MALTA
St Anne Clinic
MALAYSIA
Malaysian Paediatric Association
NETHERLANDS
De groene SEH; The Dutch EM Climate & Health Interest group
De Duurzame Verpleegkundige (The Sustainable Nurse)
Dutch Emergency Medicine Climate and Health Interest group
European Public Health Association (EUPHA)
European Specialist Nurses Organisation
Zorginstituut Nederland
NEPAL
Health Environmentand Climate Action Foundation (HECAF360)
NEW ZEALAND
Public Health Association of New Zealand
New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine
OraTaiao:NZ Climate and Health Council
NIGERIA
Afrihealth Optonet Association (AHOA) - CSOs Network
Amaclare Connect & Development Initiative (Our Lady of Perpetual Help initiaive)
Dr Uzo Adirieje Foundation (DUZAFOUND)
Global Emerging Pathogens Treatment Consortium (GET)
Nurses Across the Borders International
Society for Conservation and Sustainability of Energy and Environment in Nigeria (SOCSEEN)/Afrihealth Optonet Association (CSOs)
NORWAY
Norwegian Medical students association
Norwegian Physicians' Campaign against Climate Change
PAKISTAN
Sukaar Welfare Organization
Youth Association for Development (YAD) Pakistan
PERU
IFMSA-PERU
PHILIPPINES
Dr. Arturo P. Pingoy Medical Center
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery
RISE South East Asia Alliance for Health and Climate
St. Pauls Hospital of Iloilo, Inc.
POLAND
Pedestrian Space
QATAR
Qatar Medical Students' Association
REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA
Association of Doctors for the Environment MADE - Macedonia
SOMALIA
Action for Women and Children Concern(AWCC)
SOUTH AFRICA
groundWork, Friends of the Earth South Africa
South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU)
SPAIN
Asociación Española de Pediatría
Association for Support the Patients with Pneumonia and their Families (NEUMOAI)
Comité, 48 Congreso de la Sociedad de Pediatria del Sureste
DKV Seguros
EIGA (Asociación Galega de Investigación na Enfermidade Inflamatoria Intestinal)
Pediatric Environmental Health Speciality Unit Murcia
medicusmundi españa
SWAZILAND
Youth and Women for Change
SWEDEN
Läkare i Världen (Médecins du Monde Sweden)
Psychologist & Psychotherapists for Future Sweden
Swedish Doctors for the Environment
SWITZERLAND
Doctors for XR Switzerland
ErgoTERREapie
TAIWAN
Chung Hwa University of Medical Technology
TONGA
Clean Green Tonga Incorporated
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
EarthMedic and EarthNurse Foundation for Planetary Health
UGANDA
Amoru AIDS Support Community Initiative
Kikandwa Environmental Association
MentorPoint Africa
SAF-TESO
West Humanitarian Response Committee (WNHRC)
UNITED KINGDOM
Airlie Medical Practice
Association of Clinical Psychologists, UK
Association of Directors of Public Health (ADPH)
Bodriggy Health Centre
British and Irish Association of Stroke Physicians
British Geriatrics Society
British Medical Association
The Centre for Sustainable Healthcare
Climate Acceptance Studios-Ride for their Lives
Climate and Health Scorecard Project
Doctors in Unite
Epilepsy Nurses Association (ESNA)
European Young Family Doctors' Movement (EYFDM - formerly Vasco da Faculty of Public Health
Gama Movement
Green at Bart’s Health
Green Health Wales
Leeds Medact
Intensive Care Society
Medact
The Medical Group
Mount Vernon Hospital
Nurses United UK
NHS Green Bees
Pharmacy Declares
Planetary Health Report Card
Primary Care Respiratory Society
Psych Declares
Renal Unit, Royal Free Hospital, London
Royal College of Occupational Therapists
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
Royal College of Physicians
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Royal Pharmaceutical Society
St Augustine's Surgery
Sustainable Exercise Partnership
Tower Hamlets GP Care Group CIC
Transport and Health Science Group
UK Faculty of Public Health
UK Health Alliance on Climate Change
Wellspring Surgery
Wyre Forest Health Partnership
Young People’s Health Special Interest Group, in association with Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Academy of Integrative Health & Medicine
Acterra: Action for a Healthy Planet
Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments
American College of Lifestyle Medicine
American Medical Women's Association Physicians Georgia Branch
Association of Academic Physiatrists
California Nurses for Environmental Health and Justice
Center for Climate Change and Health
Chesapeake Physicians for Social Responsibility
CleanEarth4Kids.org
Climate 911
Climate and Health Foundation
Climate Code Blue
Climate for Health/ecoAmerica
Climate Health Now
Climate Psychiatry Alliance
Common Ground Rising
Concerned Health Professionals of New York
DAMASCUS Citizens for Sustainability
George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication
Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility
Health Professionals for a Healthy Climate
Health Promotion Consultants
The Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health
Michigan Clinicians for Climate Action
Montana Health Professionals for a Healthy Climate
NC Clinicians for Climate Action
New Hampshire Healthcare Workers for Climate Action
Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility
Physicians Against Red Meat (PhARM)
Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR)
Physicians for Social Responsibility - Arizona Chapter
Physicians for Social Responsibility Iowa Chapter
Physicians for Social Responsibility - Maine
Physicians for Social Responsibility Pennsylvania
Physicians for Social Responsibility - Sacramento
Physicians for Social Responsibility Wisconsin
Physicians for Social Responsibility - New York
Physicians for Social Responsibility- Los Angeles
Physicians for Social Responsibility Colorado
Psychology Coalition of NGOs at the United Nations
Public Health Advisory Council (PHAC), Climate Actions Campaign
Puerto Rico Clinicians for Climate Action
San Diego Pediatricians for Clean Air
San Francisco Bay Physicians for Social Responsibility
Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine
South Carolina Health Professionals for Climate Action
Sustain Our Abilities
Texas Physicians for Social Responsibility
True Health Initiative
Vermont Climate And Health Alliance
Virginia Clinicians for Climate Action
Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility
West End Revitalization Association (WERA)
Wisconsin Environmental Health Network
Wisconsin Health Professionals for Climate Action
YLabs
VIETNAM
CHERAD (Center for Health Environment Management R&D
YEMEN
Yemen Public Health Association
ZIMBABWE
Centre for Natural Resource Governance
Media Contacts:
Dave Walsh
Communications Advisor, Global Climate and Health Alliance (Europe)
+34 691 826 764, press@climateandhealthalliance.org is checked regularly.
Jemma De Leon
Communications Strategist, Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty (USA)
+1 909 536 9714, jemma@fossilfueltreaty.org