| Literature DB >> 21707990 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In responding to the health challenges of climate change, those responsible for health policies and resource allocations need to know the resource consequences of their decisions. This article examines the availability and strength of economic evidence for policy makers to draw on in making health policy decisions.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21707990 PMCID: PMC3148969 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-7-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Classification of damage costs1
| Impact type | More Direct | More Indirect |
|---|---|---|
| • Health service use | • Impact on household income or productive time of individuals | |
| • Morbidity (health-related quality of life) | • Stress, trauma | |
1 Note the classification proposed gives a general indication of which damage costs tend to be 'more' or 'less' tangible and direct, but these can vary between persons and contexts.
Global annual cost of climate change adaptation from the literature, in billion US$
| Sector | World Bank1 | UNFCCC2 | Ebi3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health sector | 2.0 | 3.8 - 4.4 | 3.3 - 10.7 |
| Water supply | 13.7 | 9.0 - 11.0 | - |
| Agriculture, forestry and fisheries | 7.6 | 14.0 | - |
| Extreme weather | 6.7 | - | - |
'-' not estimated
1 The World Bank study estimates the adaptation costs of two scenarios over four decadal periods from 2010 until 2050. The scenario presented in the table is from the National Centre for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) which is labelled the 'Wettest scenario'. For the other scenario from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), labelled the 'Driest scenario', the costs are as follows: human health (US$ 1.6 billion), water supply and flood protection (US$ 19.2 billion), agriculture forestry and fisheries (US$ 7.3 billion), extreme weather events (US$ 6.5 billion).
2 Two scenarios were modelled for the health sector analysis: stabilisation of CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases at 750 parts per million by volume (ppmv) by 2210 and 550 ppmv by 2170. The table presents results for 550 ppmv. For the 750 ppmv scenario, the costs vary US$ 4.5 to US$ 5.4 billion. The variation is accounted for mainly by uncertainties in the number of additional malaria cases. In the water sector, the two figures represent SRES B1 (lower cost) and SRES A1 scenarios.
3 Scenarios similar to the UNFCCC study, as the latter used disease figures from Ebi (2008). For the health impacts, Ebi drew on the WHO Global Burden of Disease Study. The table presents results for 550 ppmv. For the 750 ppmv scenario, the costs vary US$ 4.0 to US$ 12.6 billion. Under an unmitigated emissions scenario, costs vary from US$ 5.9 to US$ 18.0 billion.
4 Other sectors are infrastructure and coastal zones. Under the driest scenario these account for US$ 43.1 billion, taking the total global costs to US$ 77.7 billion.
5 Other sectors are infrastructure, coastal zones and natural ecosystems. On infrastructure adaptation costs, there is a wide variation in cost between the estimates based on the Munich Re data (US$ 8 billion) and the Association of British Insurance data (US$ 130 billion).