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What Canadians need to know about how climate change is affecting their health

Climate change is hurting us, and a global report released today warns the impact on people's health especially the elderly, the young, and the vulnerable will get far worse if leaders fail to commit to more ambitious climate targets at COP26.

Lancet report on health and climate highlights extreme heat, wildfire and food insecurity as key challenges

A man carries big blue water jugs
A man carrying multiple jugs of water walks through a sprinkler in Vancouver on Monday, June 29, during a record-breaking heat wave that contributed to hundreds of deaths in British Columbia. Extreme heat is just one of the climate-related health impacts the Lancet report warns will get worse as the planet warms. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Our planet is changing. So is our journalism. This story is part of a CBC News initiative entitled "Our Changing Planet" to show and explain the effects of climate change and what is being done about it.


Climate change is hurting us, and a global report released today warns the impact on people's health especially the elderly, the young, and the vulnerable will get far worse if leaders fail to commit to more ambitioustargets at COP26, the upcoming United Nations conference on climate.

The world is already1.2 C warmer than it was between 1850 and1900, the pre-industrial period, and the latest report by the Lancetmedical journal measures how that change is affecting people's healtharound the world.

The authors found the health impacts of climate change are getting worse across every factor measured, includingthe physical and mental toll ofextreme heat,the spread of infectious diseases, and decreasing crop yields andfood insecurity. A totalof 93 authors, including climate scientists, economists, public health experts and political scientists, contributed to the analysis.

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"When people are ... thinking about climate changeoff there in a far away, distant land, in a far distant future, these reports shatter that myth," said Ian Mauro, the executive director of the Prairie Climate Centre at the University of Winnipeg. Mauro was not involved in the Lancet report.

"They show that it is happening now, that it is real, and that the consequences at this relatively early stage in the climate game are tragic now. Just imagine decades into the future."

It's a reality more Canadians have experienced this year from drought to wildfire to deadly heatwaves. But the Lancet authors also call out Canada as a country that has a gapbetween its carbon-cutting ambitions and its strategy to make it happen.

A flare stack lights the sky from the Imperial Oil refinery in Edmonton in this file photo from 2018. While Canada has ramped up its plans to cut emissions ahead of COP26, more needs to be done, say authors from the Lancet policy brief. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Canada's emissions growing

Whilethe Lancet report's authors credit Canada's government with taking positive steps through carbon pricing and mandating new vehicles to be zero-emission by 2035, they warn more is needed.

"At the average pace of decarbonization observed between 2015 and 2019, it would take Canada over 188 more years to fully decarbonize its energy system,"stated a policy brief provided by the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change

"Canada and the U.S. are the only G7 countries that have increased emissions since signing the Paris Agreement and Canada's have grown the fastest, primarily due to oil and gas production."

The report, entitled a"Code Red for a Healthy Future," highlights this time as a fork in the road, a pointat which leaders can either choose to lock the world into increased emissions andcatastrophic global warming, or to focuson meeting the goals set out in the Paris Agreement.

"Despite the gory headlines of doom and disaster, the best available science is still saying there's a pathway for us to achieve some level of human resilience that will create a healthy future for our kids and grandkids," Mauro said.

WATCH |Developed countries still short on pledge to help poorer nations act on climate:

Inaction and inequity key concerns ahead of COP26 climate summit

3 years ago
Duration 2:06
As world leaders prepare for next month's COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Greta Thunberg is criticizing governments for not living up to their promises while others are pointing to concerns about the inequity facing countries most impacted by climate change.

Deadly heat wave

One prime example of the consequences ofhuman-caused climate change isthe deadly June 2021 heatwave, which is mentioned high up in the report.

When record-breaking temperatures soared above 40 C in B.C. and the Pacific Northwest of theU.S., hundreds of people died prematurely from the heat.

Exposure to extreme heat increases the risk of death from cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and respiratory conditions. According to the Lancet report, those most at risk aresociety's most vulnerable people facing social disadvantages, children less than 1 year old and seniors older than 65 years.

A global team of climate experts reported this summer the heat dome would have been "virtually impossible" without human-caused climate change, and extreme heat events will become more likely and severe as the plant warms.

"What we can safely say is that the heat wave was made much worse by the amount of climate change that we have experienced in the last century and a half," saidUniversity of Victoria climatologistFaron Anslow, who is an author ofthe studywhich was cited by the Lancet report.

Rising temperatures are also having an impact on people's mental health and their ability to work, according to the Lancet. In 2020,heat cost Canadians a loss of almost 22 million hours of labour, which is up 151 per cent compared to the1990-1994 average.

Wildfires disproportionately impact Indigenous people

The report also points to how wildfires are increasingly a threat to Canadians.

According to the authors,Canadaexperienced an 18 per cent increase in annual daily population exposure to wildfiresfrom 2001-04 to 2017-20.

That was before the village of Lytton, B.C., which had recorded the hottest temperatures ever in Canada, burned to the groundlast summer devastating many homes and buildings of theLytton First Nation.

In northwestern Ontario too, summer wildfires raised concerns about air quality and forcedFirst Nations communities to evacuate.

"Overall, Indigenous Peoples, including First Nations, Mtis, and Inuit, are disproportionately impacted by fire, with a 33 times higher chance of evacuation due to wildfires for First Nations persons living on reserve compared to those living off-reserve," states aCanada-specificpolicy brief stemming from the Lancet report.

Damaged structures and vehicles are seen in Lytton, B.C., on July 9, 2021, after a wildfire destroyed most of the village on June 30. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Smaller crop yields are hurting farmers

Canadian farmers are also feeling the impact of climate change, especially in the Canadian prairies, wheredrought made for an especially bad 2021.

"Some of them were half of a crop, a third of a crop, and in some of the places, the crop wasn't even harvested because it was so poor and thin,"saidDarrin Qualman, the director of climate crisis policy and action at the National Farmer's Union.

Qualman, who lives near Dundurn, Sask., said inrecent years they've had dry winters in the province, but were saved by rains in June and July.

This year that rain never came.

According to the Lancet report, in every month of 2020, up to 19 per cent of the global land surface was affected by extreme drought. From 1950 to 1999, that number never rose above 13 per cent.

The authors warn drought and warm temperatures are reducing the yields of staple crops around the world, which could contribute to food insecurity.

A hay bales
Heat, wind, grasshoppers and very little rain resulted in major production loss for Saskatchewan farmers in 2021. (Richard Agecoutay/CBC News)

Some crops in Canada also saw lower than average yields in 2020, according to the report. Nationally, the total duration of crop growthwas down9.7 per cent nationally for soybeans, and down 3.4 per cent for spring-wheat, compared to 1981 to 2010.

Whilelosses in the Canadian prairies aren't at the point where grocery stores will have empty shelves, Qualman said they are seeing real impacts on farmers and their communities.

"I think the hardest hit are the cattle farmers who maybe didn't get the hay crop they need for the winter, and didn't have much grassto graze on inthe summer," he said.

But whatever this year's losses mean for farmers, Qualman said farmers will suffer greatly down the road if nothing changes.

"Maybe more than any group in Canada, rural people in the Canadian prairies really need to be concerned about climate change because it's our farmland area that's going to be the hardest hit, and the first hit, and the most directly hit if we don't get off the course we're on now," he said.

Southern Alberta Farmer, Richard Owen, stands in the same spot of his barley field in July 2020 and July 2021. (Kim Owen)