A new centre, focussed on delivering research on climate change and its impacts on health, is being created by the University of Exeter.
Together with the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), the National Trust, Forest Research, the Met Office and other partner organisations, the £10m Centre for Net Positive Health and Climate Solutions is funded by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI). The centre will focus on finding net positive solutions to the well-established negative impacts of the climate crisis and associated environmental changes in human health.
From heatstroke, to the link between air pollution and coronary heart disease, to the increased likelihood of new pandemics, understanding and mitigating against these negative effects is of vital importance. The centre will also seek to ensure that any new measures don’t exacerbate existing inequalities among communities most impacted by climate change.
From its hub in Cornwall, with staff working across the UK, the centre will contribute to scientific advances, policy advice and innovation to reduce the negative health impacts of climate change while maximising the benefits of research.
Professor Tim Taylor from the University of Exeter, who leads the Centre for Net Positive Health and Climate Solutions, said, “Climate change is having major impacts on our health – whether that’s directly through heat related illnesses or infectious diseases, or indirectly through our food systems. Ecosystems play a critical role in mediating these impacts. Through better design of our urban environments, our green and blue spaces, or through food systems, we can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and better respond to emerging health threats.
“The Net Positive Centre for Health and Climate Solutions will gather evidence on emerging risks and opportunities, work with communities to create responses and inform policies to improve the health and wellbeing of communities across the UK and beyond.”
From a PhD investigating the links between thunderstorms and asthma, to analysis of mental health and climate linkages, the scope of work will be wide ranging, engaging with the public and policy makers at all levels and demonstrating why climate change is a public health issue.
Professor Rosie Hails, Director of Science and Nature at the National Trust said, “We are seeing the impacts of climate change across our landscapes with more frequent flooding events, storms uprooting trees, drought and high temperatures baking the land and disturbing and disrupting wildlife.
“The Trust is making interventions at scale in both urban places and the countryside; on our land, and in the wider landscape with partners, to help alleviate the impacts of climate change and deliver benefits for people and wildlife.
“Working with our partners in this programme will facilitate evidence-led approaches, and at the same time our interventions can contribute to that evidence base. For example, our work in urban places will explore how to improve built, green & blue infrastructure in ways that will deliver multiple benefits for people and reduce inequalities.”
Liz O’Brien, Principal Social Scientist at Forest Research, said, “Forest Research is a UK leader in social research examining the relationship between people and treescapes. This is an exciting interdisciplinary research project. Our contribution will be undertaken on behalf of the GB-wide Natural Environment Social Research Network, which also includes Natural England, Environment Agency, Natural Resources Wales and NatureScot. Through exploring solutions to the challenges of climate change for people’s health, the network aims to contribute a better evidence base that will inform policy and practice.”