Depuis le début du mois de novembre 2023, le nord-est du Kenya a connu d'importantes précipitations. Kenya, 2023. Iain Thomson/MSF
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At COP28, more failure is not an option for vulnerable communities

Too little is being done to protect the most vulnerable people against the negative impacts of climate change, warns Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). World leaders gathering in Dubai for COP28 must take urgent measures to protect the health of the most affected communities.

“The world’s most vulnerable people are paying with their health and their lives for a problem they did not create,” says Dr. Christos Christou, MSF International President.

“It is both absurd and tragic that those who are the least responsible for the emissions that generate the climate emergency are left to suffer the consequences. This shows that we are not just in a crisis of climate, but also in a crisis of humanity and solidarity.”

The climate emergency is a health and humanitarian emergency. Severe health impacts of climate change are already affecting people across the globe and are projected to increase over time as the planet heats up. MSF works in many of the world’s most climate-vulnerable settings and treats patients experiencing the health impacts of climate change first-hand.

In 2023, we have continued to witness and respond to the consequences of such events, including widespread flooding in South Sudan, severe cyclones in Myanmar, Madagascar and Mozambique, and relentless heat and extended droughts that have driven millions to the edge of starvation throughout the Horn of Africa. We have also responded to multiple concurrent cholera outbreaks in several countries and alarmingly high rates of dengue across the Americas. The deadly mix of malaria and malnutrition has kept our paediatric wards full across the Sahel, including in eastern Chad, where people fled to from gruesome conflict in Sudan.

Therapeutic food has to be loaded to a helicopter to be transferred to a remote health centre. Madagascar, 2023. © Mitsi Persani/MSF

“This is not a future problem; it is happening now. We see it in our waiting rooms,” says Dr. Christou. “And it is happening because global political leadership has failed to deliver on commitments to curb emissions and deliver on their promises to support the most affected countries to adapt.”  

As the parties to the Conference take stock of the progress to meet climate goals, it is already clear that lack of climate action has put people’s health at great risk. Failing to cap global heating at 1.5 degrees Celsius is an existential threat for many people in the humanitarian contexts where MSF works.

In Rubkona, South Sudan, vehicles lay abandoned and submerged in the floods that have devastated the area. South Sudan, 2022. © MSF

The most affected communities and countries have repeatedly asked for, but are not receiving, the support they need to deal with the consequences of climate change. They need real commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and they need concrete financial and technical support. These communities need to see climate action that equals the scale of the climate emergency. The world cannot continue to look on as humanitarian crises become more severe, and the world’s most vulnerable people continue to bear the consequences.

“We cannot afford another failure. How many more years will go by, how many more COPs, and how many more lives will be affected – or lost – before concrete measures are decided and acted upon?”

Dr. Christos Christou, MSF International President