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Ressort: Internationale Beziehungen

Climate change and health: How countries are closing the gaps

AI-generiertVerfasst: 30. Mai 2026, 23:07 MESZInternationale Beziehungen

Climate change poses a massive threat to global health – yet many countries are still acting too slowly. New initiatives are now attempting to bridge the gap between climate policy and health protection.

The connection between climate change and human health is scientifically well established: rising temperatures promote infectious diseases, air pollution exacerbates respiratory diseases, droughts threaten food security. Yet in political practice, climate and health policy often remain separate – with serious consequences.

The central problem lies in poor coordination. Bloomberg reports that many governments have formally anchored their climate targets, but do not systematically assess the health impacts of their measures. At the same time, health systems often plan their infrastructure without considering future climate risks – a mistake that takes its toll in crises such as heat waves or floods.

Growing awareness of integration

Internationally, awareness of this need for action is growing. DW documents that leading health organizations are now making concrete demands on governments: climate policy must be explicitly designed as a health investment. This means, for example, that transport transition and energy transition should not only reduce CO₂ but also improve air quality and thus cardiovascular and lung diseases.

Some countries are already experimenting with integrated approaches. Politico reports that the European Union is increasingly anchoring climate adaptation in its health strategies – for example through heat protection plans for vulnerable population groups and strengthening health systems in climate-vulnerable regions.

Financing gap threatens poorer countries

But financing remains a sticking point. While climate investments in industrialized countries are rising, developing countries lack the funds to make their health systems climate-resilient. Experts warn: without targeted support, the health burdens of climate change will disproportionately affect poorer populations – and thus exacerbate existing inequalities.

Quellen

22:4130. Mai 2026bloomberg.com
dw.com30. Mai 202622:41
22:4130. Mai 2026politico.eu
investing.com30. Mai 202622:41
22:4130. Mai 2026france24.com
dawn.com30. Mai 202622:41