Highlights and recommendations from the EXHAUSTION Policy conference

The Exhaustion Policy conference 'Exposure to heat and air pollution in Europe: health impacts and benefits of mitigation and adaptation' took place on 15 November in Brussels, with contributions from researchers, policy makers and civil society.

Recommendations from the policy conference

Here are seven of the policy recommendations from the conference:

1. Due to the interactive effects of air pollution and heat, policies reducing air pollution concentrations in Europe, such as the revised Ambient Air Quality Directive, will not only reduce the health effects of air pollution but also prevent death and disease from heat.

2. Even in the most optimistic emission scenarios, it is anticipated that the contribution from wildfires to air pollution will increase. There needs to be stronger wildfire management and prevention.

3. Policies addressing the health risks from air pollution should be included in heat–health action plans developed across Europe.

4. No health adaptation strategies can give the same benefits for health as mitigation: Urgent cut in emissions will have immediate and long-standing health benefits. We need to keep the focus on policies on emission reductions, while adaptation strategies will still be needed. Health should be a driver for mitigation.

5. Air pollution and climate change policies should not be two separate policy areas but need to go hand in hand to harvest the health co-benefits.

6. The design of adaptation policies should be supported by strong scientific evidence and encourage evaluation studies on specific adaptation strategies.

7. Highlighting differences in impact across and within countries: There is a diverse and uneven distribution of the socioeconomic impacts of health effects due to climate change among and within countries. This highlights potential issues of equity and fairness within Europe, which should be considered for policymakers.

Photo left to right: Elina Bardram, DG Climate Action, European Commission, Francois Wakenhut, DG Environment, European Commission, Sophie Perroud, HEAL, Klea Katsouyanni, Professor, University of Athens, Javi López, MEP, European Parliament, Kristin Aunan, CICERO & project leader, Joan Ballester, ISGlobal, Annette Peters, Helmholtz Munich, Zorana Jovanovic Andersen, European Respiratory Society, Ulas Im, University of Aarhus

Presentations from the conference in PDF:

Introduction to the topic:

Projected warming and air pollution developments in Europe, including from wildfires, and health effects of interaction between heat and air pollution

The full program can be found here.

The policy conference can be watched here: