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The Russian Soyuz space capsule lands with Expedition 20 Commander Gennady Padalka of Russia, Flight Engineer Michael Barratt of the U.S. and Canadian circus billionaire Guy Laliberte in the vast steppe near the town of Arkalyk in northern Kazakhstan October 11, 2009. REUTERS/Yuri Kochetkov/Pool

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    WHO urges Asia to prepare for climate change crises

    KUALA LUMPUR
    Mon Jul 2, 2007 4:37am EDT
    A laborer works at a plant in Changzhi, northern China's Shanxi province, June 22, 2007. Asian nations must prepare to tackle disasters unleashed by global warming with the same urgency they now focus on fighting disease epidemics, the World Health Organization said on Monday. REUTERS/Stringer

    KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Asian nations must prepare to tackle disasters unleashed by global warming with the same urgency they now focus on fighting disease epidemics, the World Health Organization said on Monday.

    Science  |  Green Business

    And with Asia's share of global greenhouse gas emissions from burning fuels expected to grow, urgent action was needed to mitigate the situation, said Shigeru Omi, WHO regional director for the Western Pacific.

    "For environmental issues, if you wait until the crisis happens, it will be too late," Omi told reporters in the Malaysian capital.

    "Everybody is interested in economic development, but somehow we have to strike the balance between this development and the preservation of nature," Omi added. "And unless we do the action now, we will be faced with very serious consequences."

    The WHO had been successful in urging member states to prepare themselves to fight communicable diseases, such as SARS and bird flu, Omi said, but similar action was needed in preparing for likely environmental disasters.

    "That kind of preparedness should also be applied to environmental issues, because we know it is just a matter of time," he added. "Unless we take action for the environment, disaster will come."

    Rising global temperatures are melting Himalayan glaciers, threatening to inundate low-lying atolls and create unsanitary conditions that breed disease, destroy crops and compromise food supplies, Omi told a WHO workshop on climate change.

    "Increasing temperatures are among the variables that affect malaria, and the disease is emerging and re-emerging in places where it did not exist before, or for a long time," he said.

    The mosquito-borne disease had been found in the highlands of Papua New Guinea this year, he added, after re-emerging in South Korea in late 1990.

    Rising temperatures had also driven a surge in dengue fever in Asia, Omi said.

    In the tiny city state of Singapore, for example, the mean annual temperature rose to 28.4 degrees Celsius in 1998 from 26.9 Celsius in 1978, contributing to a more than 10-fold increase in dengue cases over the two decades.

    Fighting global warming and rising emissions would require innovative tax incentives and subsidies for clean energy or energy-saving industries, besides the development of environmentally friendly technologies, and lifestyle changes to cut the use of cars.

    By gathering evidence of the negative impact of climate change, the WHO hoped to get countries to change their ways, Omi added.

    "Everybody knows the environment issues, but still their primary concern is economic development, so it's very important to give the evidence of this environmental degradation," he said. "If you continue to focus on the economic profit, earth as a whole will suffer."



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