Children facing uncertain future, experts warn
Experts
say climate change and harmful advertising encouraging fast-food consumption
and under age drinking are putting children at risk.
The
UK was ranked among the top 10 countries in the world for the overall health
and wellbeing of children,.
However,
it fell behind in safeguarding the environment for their future.
The
report by the WHO, the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) and the Lancet
Commission, ranked 180 countries on the likelihood of a child
being able to "flourish", focusing on health and wellbeing factors
such as education, nutrition and child mortality.
Countries
were then also ranked on their carbon emission levels.
Some
40 child-health experts warned progress over the past two decades was "set
to reverse" if radical changes were not made by governments around the
globe.
"Every
child worldwide now faces existential threats from climate change and
commercial pressures," said former Prime Minister of New Zealand, Helen
Clark, who co-chairs the commission.
Countries
need to overhaul their approach to child and adolescent health to protect the
world they will inherit in the future.
The experts warned a
4C rise in global temperatures by 2100, in line with current projections, would
result in "devastating health consequences" for future generations -
a rise in ocean levels, heatwaves, severe malnutrition and a spike in
infectious diseases such as malaria.
More than two billion
people live in countries where development is hampered by humanitarian crises,
conflicts, and natural disasters, problems increasingly linked with climate
change," said minister Awa Coll-Seck, from Senegal, who co-chairs the commission.
While the world's
poorest countries were found to be among those with the lowest greenhouse-gas
emissions, they were deemed most likely to be exposed to the negative impacts
of climate change.
"Promoting better
conditions today for children to survive and thrive nationally does not have to
come at the cost of eroding children's futures globally," added Mr
Coll-Seck.
In 2015, the world's
countries agreed on 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs), including no
hunger, zero poverty and climate action, but five years on, little progress has
been made toward achieving them.
UK law dictates that,
by 2050, carbon emissions will be virtually halted and any remaining emissions
will have to be compensated for by activities such as tree planting.
And the government sparked industry concern
earlier this month by bringing the date of a planned ban on sales of new
petrol, diesel or hybrid cars forward from 2040 to 2035 in a bid to hit
zero-carbon emission targets.
However, the new
report placed the UK in 133rd place on providing a climate fit for future
generations, with it currently on track to emit 115% more CO2 than its 2030
target.
The US and Australia
were also among the worst emitters.
(Predatory)
The report also
highlighted the threat posed to children from harmful marketing.
It found they were
exposed to as many as 30,000 television advertisements a year, including those
for alcohol, junk food and sugary soft drinks.
One of the
commission's authors, Anthony Costello, University College London professor of
global health and sustainability, warned the meteoric rise in the use of social
media among children and adolescents meant "predatory marketing" was
more of a danger than ever.
"We have few
facts and figures about the huge expansion of social-media advertising and
algorithms aimed at our children he
said.
In 2019. a report estimated nearly
2.3 billion children and adults on the planet were overweight and
more than 150 million children had stunted growth.
The only countries on
track to beat CO2 emission targets by 2030, while also performing fairly on
child health and wellbeing, were Albania, Armenia, Grenada, Jordan, Moldova,
Sri Lanka, Tunisia, Uruguay and Vietnam,
The report calls for a
new global movement driven by and for children, with its recommendations
including
Stop CO2
emissions with the utmost urgency, to ensure children have a future on this
planet
Place children
and adolescents at the centre of our efforts to achieve sustainable development
New policies
and investment in all sectors to work towards child health and rights
Incorporate
children's voices into policy decisions
Tighten
national regulation of harmful commercial marketing, supported by a new
optional protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Prof Costello warned
the UK's high ranking for the overall health and wellbeing of children did not
mean it could "rest on its laurels," citing a predicted rise in child
poverty as a warning sign.
"For almost one
in every two children to be poor in 21st Century Britain is not just a disgrace
but a social calamity and an economic disaster, all rolled into one," he
said.
Lancet editor-in-chief
Dr Richard Horton said: "This calls for the birth of a new era for child
and adolescent health. It is the supreme test of our generation.,
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