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Deadly heat worldwide prompts $300 million for climate health research at COP30

Deadly heat worldwide prompts $300 million for climate health research at COP30
Demonstrators participate in the Forest Peoples' March in defense of the forest, territorial rights and climate responsibility during the COP30 UN Climate Summit on Nov. 13, 2025, in Belem, Brazil. (AP)
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Updated 1 min 18 sec ago

Deadly heat worldwide prompts $300 million for climate health research at COP30

Deadly heat worldwide prompts $300 million for climate health research at COP30
  • Philanthropies put $300 million into health-related research
  • Experts warn climate change is worsening health indicators worldwide

BELEM, Brazil: With more than a half-million people worldwide dying from heat-related causes every year, a group of philanthropies is putting $300 million into developing life-saving solutions as global temperatures continue to rise.
The money, announced this week at the COP30 climate negotiations in Brazil, is aimed at developing data and figuring out the best investments for tackling rising risks from extreme heat, air pollution and infectious disease.
“We are a philanthropy. We can’t just keep plugging holes and resuscitating a dying model of development,” said Estelle Willie, the director of health policy and communications at The Rockefeller Foundation, one of the funders.
“So what we are trying to do is through our philanthropy capital, we can start testing and validating new solutions through this work and coming together,” she said. Separately, COP30 host Brazil launched an initiative called the Belem Health Action Plan to encourage countries to monitor and coordinate climate-related health policy across their various ministries and departments.
That effort is part of Brazil’s broader focus at the UN climate talks on bolstering countries’ ability to prepare for – and adapt to – worsening climate impacts including floods, fires, drought, storms and hurricanes.
The newly pledged $300 million adds to the $1 billion-$2 billion being spent in public money toward researching climate-related health impacts, according to a 2023 study in PLOS journal.
Experts said far more is still needed.
“Progress on health is declining,” Willie said in an interview with Reuters. “We’ve had hard-fought wins in health through technology, through the global health system. But climate change is literally making every single problem and global health worse right now.”
An October report in The Lancet scientific journal estimates the yearly number of deaths from heat-related causes worsened by climate change at nearly 550,000.
Another 150,000 annual deaths can be linked to air pollution, often from the burning of fossil fuels but also from worsening wildfires, the report said, while some infectious diseases are also rising. Reported cases of dengue fever are also up 49 percent since the 1950s, it said.
UN agencies in August estimated about half the world’s population, or more than 3.3 billion people, are already struggling with the rising heat.
“The warnings from scientists on climate change have become reality. And it is clear that not all people are affected equally,” said John-Arne Røttingen, chief executive of the Wellcome Trust, another funder.
The most vulnerable are children, pregnant women, older people and outdoor workers, along with “those communities with the least resources to respond,” he said.
Other funders in the newly announced Climate and Health Funders Coalition include the Gates Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies and IKEA Foundation. Another 27 philanthropies have signed on but have yet to commit funds.


Pro-Palestinian activists use lift to scale Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate

Pro-Palestinian activists use lift to scale Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate
Updated 13 sec ago

Pro-Palestinian activists use lift to scale Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate

Pro-Palestinian activists use lift to scale Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate

BERLIN: Pro-Palestinian activists climbed atop Berlin’s iconic Brandenburg Gate and unfurled a large banner on Thursday before police arrested them.
Six activists wearing work vests and using a rented cherry-picker truck drove onto the tourist-packed square at noon, with three of them quickly using the lift to get on top of the 26-meter-tall structure.
“It happened very quickly,” Berlin police spokesperson Florian Nath said at the site. 
“We were here within minutes, but the basket was already on 
its way up, and we didn’t stop it then because it’s too dangerous in case something happens 
or people fall out.”

FASTFACT

A special police rescue team climbed up the Brandenburg Gate to detain the activists and bring them back down in an operation that lasted about an hour and a half.

The activists on top of the gate unfurled a banner reading “Never again genocide — freedom for Palestine.” They also lit flares and shouted slogans.
The other three activists, meanwhile, locked themselves in the cab of the truck, with police smashing a window to arrest them forcibly.
A special police rescue team climbed up the Brandenburg Gate to detain the activists and bring them back down in an operation that lasted about an hour and a half, Nath said.
All six activists were detained on suspicion of trespassing and other violations, Nath said.
He added that investigators were still checking whether the cherry picker had done any damage to the 18th-century gate.
Thursday’s incident was not the first time protesters or others have illegally climbed the landmark, a well-known symbol of Germany located near the heart of Berlin’s government district.
“We’ve had that happen quite a few times,” Nath said. 
“Our rescue team is very familiar with the routes up there. They’re very experienced.”