Extreme weather events such as droughts, floods and fires carry their own health hazards, while fossil fuel workers and communities close to plants face a plethora of risks ranging from oil spills and pipeline explosions to lung disease and cancers.
The new initiative says that the clean energy transition must respect indigenous rights and be just for “every worker, community and country”.
Ruth Etzel, the co-chair of the International Pediatric Association’s environmental health group, said: “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.”