Climate change “could kill 250,000 children” — Charity report

By KUNA,

London : A quarter million children could die in 2010 due to the effects of climate change, Save the Children warned Monday, and the leading British charity said the figure could rise to more than 400,000 per year by 2030.
Its report “Feeling the Heat”, which is circulated Monday, claims that climate change is the biggest global health threat to children in the 21st century.


Support TwoCircles

The charity predicts that 175 million children a year – equivalent to almost three times the population of Great Britain – will suffer the consequences of natural disasters like cyclones, droughts, and floods by 2030.
It warns that more than 900 million children in the next generation will be affected by water shortages and 160 million more children will be at risk of catching malaria – one of the biggest killers of children under five – as it spreads to new parts of the world.

Save the Children is urging world leaders to put children first during climate change negotiations in Barcelona this week, ahead of the Copenhagen summit this December.

“Climate change is no longer a distant, futuristic scenario, but an immediate threat,” the charity said.
“We’ve all heard about the East African food crisis, but we have been in Ethiopia seeing first hand the impact it’s having on children’s lives,” it said.

“We have seen how vulnerable children are to the effects of climate change, ” it added.

“Erratic rainfall means farmers can no longer predict the weather and have lost their crops which are a vital source of food for their family,” it concluded.

SUPPORT TWOCIRCLES HELP SUPPORT INDEPENDENT AND NON-PROFIT MEDIA. DONATE HERE