- New global findings in the 9th annual indicator report of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change reveal that the continued over reliance on fossil fuels and failure to adapt to climate change is being paid in people’s lives, health, and livelihoods, with 12 of 20 indicators tracking health threats reaching unprecedented levels.
- The report says failure to curb the warming effects of climate change has seen the rate of heat-related deaths surge 23% since the 1990s, to 546,000 a year. In 2024 alone, air pollution from wildfire smoke was linked to a record 154,000 deaths, while the global average transmission potential of dengue has risen by up to 49% since the 1950s.
- Authors say 2.5 million deaths every year are attributable to the air pollution that comes from continued burning of fossil fuels. This is also straining national budgets – as fossil fuel prices soared, governments collectively spent 956 billion US dollars on net fossil fuel subsidies in 2023. Meanwhile oil and gas giants keep expanding their production plans – to a scale three times greater than a liveable planet can support.
- While some governments backtrack on climate commitments, the report also exposes the life-saving impact of action already underway. An estimated 160,000 lives are being saved annually from the shift away from coal and the resultant cleaner air, while renewable energy generation reached record-highs. The report reveals the emerging leadership of local governments, communities, organisations and the health sector, and calls for “all hands on deck” to accelerate progress.
**Country Data Sheets available – see Notes to Editors**
As health threats from climate change reach unprecedented levels and political backsliding on climate action threatens to stall progress, the 2025 Report of The Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change issues a fresh clarion call for “all hands on deck” to accelerate and intensify efforts to simultaneously reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and adapt to climate change.
“This year’s health stocktake paints a bleak and undeniable picture of the devastating health harms reaching all corners of the world – with record-breaking threats to health from heat, extreme weather events, and wildfire smoke killing millions. The destruction to lives and livelihoods will continue to escalate until we end our fossil fuel addiction and dramatically up our game to adapt,” warned Dr Marina Romanello, Executive Director of the Lancet Countdown at University College London.
She added, “We already have the solutions at hand to avoid a climate catastrophe – and communities and local governments around the world are proving that progress is possible. From clean energy growth to city adaptation, action is underway and delivering real health benefits – but we must keep up the momentum. Rapidly phasing out fossil fuels remains the most powerful lever to slow climate change and protect lives. At the same time, shifting to healthier, climate-friendly diets and more sustainable agricultural systems would massively cut pollution, greenhouse gases and deforestation, potentially saving over ten million lives a year."
The 9th Lancet Countdown annual indicator report, led by University College London, and produced in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), represents the work of 128 leading experts from 71 academic institutions and UN agencies globally. Published ahead of the 30th UN Conference of the Parties (COP), the report provides the most comprehensive assessment to date of the connections between climate change and health, including new metrics which record deaths from extreme heat and wildfire smoke, the coverage of urban blue spaces (rivers, lakes, and coastlines), health adaptation funding and individual engagement with health and climate change.
Record-breaking health toll of the persistent over reliance on fossil fuels and adaptation delays
The year 2024 was the hottest on record, with catastrophic consequences for the health, lives, and livelihoods of people across the globe, says the report. Worldwide, the average person was exposed to a record extra 16 health-threatening hot days owing directly to climate change, with the most vulnerable (those aged under 1 year and over 65 years) experiencing, on average, an all-time high of 20 heatwave days—a 389% and 304% increase, respectively, from the 1986–2005 yearly average.
In parallel, a new indicator in this year’s report reveals that heat-related mortality per 100,000 increased by 23% since the 1990s, with total heat-related deaths reaching an average of 546,000 annually between 2012 and 2021.
Hotter and dryer conditions have also fuelled conditions for wildfires, with fine particle pollution (PM 2.5) from wildfire smoke resulting in a record 154,000 deaths in 2024 (up 36% from the 2003–2012 yearly average), while droughts and heatwaves increased the number of people experiencing moderate or severe food insecurity by 123 million in 2023, compared to the annual average between 1981 and 2010.
Added to this, delays in the adoption of clean, climate-friendly energy means over 2 billion people still use polluting and unreliable fuels in their homes. Across 65 countries with low access to clean energy, air pollution from the household use of dirty fuels resulted in 2.3 million avoidable deaths in 2022; including some of the 2.52 million deaths still attributable to ambient air pollution from the burning of fossil fuels globally. Unsustainable food systems are also fuelling climate change, and high-carbon, unhealthy diets contributed to 11.8 million diet-related deaths in 2022, which could largely be avoided by transitioning to healthier, climate-friendly food systems.
More broadly, the report highlights climate change is increasingly destroying livelihoods, straining the economy, and burdening health budgets. Heat exposure resulted in a record 639 billion potential hours of lost labour productivity in 2024, with income losses equivalent to a staggering US$ 1.09 trillion (almost 1% of global GDP). At the same time, the costs of heat-related deaths in those over age 65 reached an all-time high of US$ 261 billion.
In response to soaring fossil fuel prices, and with outdated energy grids overly reliant on them, governments around the world poured US$ 956 billion into net fossil fuel subsidies in 2023 to keep energy locally affordable – increasing fiscal pressures and dwarfing the $300 billion a year committed to support the most climate-vulnerable countries made at COP29. Concerningly, 15 out of 87 countries responsible for 93% of global CO2 emissions spent more on net fossil fuel subsidies than their national health budgets in 2023.
As Dr Romanello explained, “The increased affordability and accessibility of clean renewable energy presents an opportunity to increase local energy generation, reduce the health harms of fossil fuels, and support the redirection of fossil fuel subsidies towards promoting a healthier future.”
Also publishing today is the 2025 Latin America Report of the Lancet Countdown, which also identifies an alarming intensification and confluence of climate hazards. Professor Stella Hartinger, Director of the Lancet Countdown Latin America and global report author, said, “Around the world we are seeing these multiple health impacts compound each other to trigger a cascade of harms that undermine the very social and economic foundations that support people’s health and wellbeing. After nine years of global monitoring, it’s clear that these health harms are the price we are paying for the consistent failure of global leaders to deliver the action needed to combat climate change and protect health – a price paid most severely by vulnerable countries that have contributed the least to the crisis.”
Authors say delays in adaptation are exacerbating the health harms of climate change. “Scarce financial support for adaptation remains a key barrier, and data in this report shows it is still grossly insufficient to cover the financial needs disclosed by countries,” said Dr Romanello. “A political shift towards reduced foreign aid support from some of the world’s wealthiest countries, further restricts financial support for climate change action, leaving all populations increasingly unprotected.”
Political backsliding on climate commitments will exacerbate threats to people’s health and survival
Added to these growing harms, the report says political backsliding on climate and health action threatens to condemn millions to a future of disease, disasters, and early death. And yet, emboldened by growing profits and a fractured political consensus on climate commitments, the world’s 100 largest fossil fuel giants have increased their projected production (as of March 2025), which would lead to their GHG emissions surpassing levels compatible with 1.5°C almost three times over by 2040, pushing the possibilities of health protecting adaptation efforts out of reach.
Private banks are supporting this deadly fossil fuel expansion, with the top 40 lenders to the fossil fuel sector collectively investing a 5-year high of US$ 611 billion in 2024 (up 29% from 2023). This exceeded their green sector lending by 15%, further hindering the zero-emission energy transition, threatening public health and jeopardising national economies on which people’s livelihoods depend.
While energy-related emissions break new record-highs, over 128 million hectares of forest were destroyed in 2023 (up 24% since 2022), diminishing the world’s natural capacity to mitigate climate change.
“The stark reality is that one of the greatest threats to human prosperity comes from leaders and companies who are rolling back on climate commitments, delaying action, and doubling down on fossil fuel production - meanwhile each unit of greenhouse gases emitted drives up the costs and challenges of adaptation,” said Professor Nadia Ameli, Lancet Countdown Working Group 4 Co-Chair. “If we remain locked into fossil fuel dependence, health systems, cooling infrastructure, and disaster response capacities will soon be overwhelmed - putting the health and lives of the world’s 8 billion people further at risk.”
Countries facing the worst consequences consistently track as the most politically engaged in climate change and health, yet they are being left behind in the clean energy transition. Deeply unequal access to technology and clean energies is leaving the most vulnerable communities reliant on dirty, harmful fuels. Just 3.5% of electricity comes from clean renewables in low-income countries compared with 13.3% in wealthy countries, while 88% of households in poorer countries still reply on polluting biomass to cook and heat their homes.
Seizing the global momentum for health-promoting climate action
While some national governments roll back on climate commitments, the report outlines that local governments, individuals, civil society, and the health sector are leading the way in shaping a healthier future, signalling what could be the start of transformative climate action. A growing number of cities (834 of 858 reporting in 2024) have completed or intend to complete climate change risk assessments, according to the CDP (the world’s largest voluntary reporting system on climate change progress). The health sector itself has shown impressive climate leadership, with health-related GHG emissions falling 16% globally between 2021 and 2022, and almost two-thirds of medical students around the world received climate and health education in 2024, building capacity for further progress.
According to the report, the global momentum for climate change action is already delivering associated health and economic benefits. An increased shift away from coal, particularly in wealthy countries, prevented an estimated 160,000 premature deaths yearly between 2010 and 2022, due to fine particulate (PM 2.5) air pollution from burning fossil fuels. The share of electricity generated by modern renewables reached a record-high 12% in 2022, with the clean energy transition generating healthier, more sustainable jobs. Globally, over 16 million people worked directly or indirectly in renewables in 2023 (up 18.3% from 2022).
As Professor Tafadzwa Mahbhaudi, Director of the Lancet Countdown Africa explained, “Climate change action remains one of the greatest health opportunities of the 21st century, also driving development, spurring innovation, creating jobs, and reducing energy poverty. Realising the myriad benefits of a health-centred response requires unlocking so-far untapped opportunities to mitigate climate change and build resilience to the impacts already being felt.”
As Professor Anthony Costello, Co-Chair of the Lancet Countdown warned, “As a rising number of world leaders threaten to reverse the little progress to date, urgent efforts are needed at every level and in every sector to both deliver and demand accelerated action that will yield immediate health benefits. As some governments uphold an unsustainable, unhealthy and ultimately unliveable status quo, people around the world are paying the ultimate price. We have to build on the momentum we have seen from local action: Delivering health-protective, equitable, and just transition requires all hands on deck.”
NOTES TO EDITORS
The Lancet Countdown was established in partnership with Wellcome, which continues to provide core financial support.
The Lancet Countdown is led by University College London, and works with almost 300 leading researchers from around the world to track and understand the evolving links between climate change and people’s health.
A full list of the 2025 Report’s authors can be found in the report.
The labels have been added to this press release as part of a project run by the Academy of Medical Sciences seeking to improve the communication of evidence. For more information, please see: http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/AMS-press-release-labelling-system-GUIDANCE.pdf if you have any questions or feedback, please contact The Lancet press office pressoffice@lancet.com
Journal
The Lancet
Method of Research
Literature review
Subject of Research
People
Article Title
The 2025 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change
Article Publication Date
29-Oct-2025
COI Statement
PJB, AC, IH, JJH, S-CH, IK, KAM, YP-S, MRo, MW, and HW were compensated for their time while drafting and developing the Lancet Countdown’s report via the Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change Wellcome Trust grant (grant number 304972/Z/23/Z). MSo, RH, and RK acknowledge the funding of Research Council of Finland VFSP-WASE (grant number 359421), together with the EU Horizon projects FirEUrisk (grant number 101003890) and ClimAir (grant 101156799). CD was supported by the European Commission via European Research Council (FLORA, grant number 101039402); and acknowledges funding by the National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment in France via project PREF-Alim. JG and AJP were supported by the Bezos Earth Fund and the Schmidt Family Foundation via grant funding for attribution science. YH, YL, and QZ were supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. KMi was compensated for his time by Columbia University, USA. DKP, MRo, and MSp were supported by the Horizon Europe CATALYSE project (CATALYSE grant number 101057131; HORIZON-HLTH-2021-ENVHLTH-02, with UK Research and Innovation reference number 10041512). MRo and JCS were supported by the Horizon Europe programme through the IDAlert project (101057554) and the UK Research and Innovation project (reference number 10056533). AU was supported by the Finnish Foreign Ministry via the IBA-ILMA project (grant number VN/13798/2023). GG-S acknowledges funding from the National Institute of Health and Care Research UK for the Global Health Research Group on Diet and Activity (NIHR133205 with sub-award contract number G109900-SJ1/171 with University of Cambridge). JJH acknowledges a grant from the Wellcome Trust, the National Institutes of Health via the Research and Engagement on Adaptation for Climate and Health project, the National Institute of Standards and Technologies, and the New Frontiers in Research Fund via the Urgently Accelerating Climate Mental Health Research & Equity through Global Networks project; and acknowledges honoraria from Columbia University, Harvard University, and Arizona State University. OJ acknowledges grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council (Heat and Health: building resilience to extreme heat in a warming world, GNT1147789) and the Wellcome Trust (Heat stress in ready-made garment factories in Bangladesh and the Heat inform pregnant study); has received support from the Global Heat and Health information Network to attend a management committee meeting in Washington, DC, USA (February, 2023), from the Minderoo Foundation to attend a meeting in Boston, MA, USA (June, 2024), and from the SE Asia Global Heat and Health Information Network Hub to attend a meeting in Singapore (January, 2025); and holds a patent for the Environmental Measurement Unit. RNS acknowledges a contract with Massachusetts General Hospital and Mass General Brigham; acknowledges honoraria for presentations and work with the Mayo Clinic, Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research, University of Oregon, Cambridge College, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, University of North Carolina, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Bezos Earth Fund, Association of American Medical Colleges, New England Journal of Medicine, and American College of Emergency Physicians; has received support for travel from the National Academy of Science, Engineering, and Medicine, the International Society of Behavioral Medicine, the University of Oregon, the Health Evolution, Fortune Brainstorm Health, the American Philosophical Society, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Clinton Global Initiative; acknowledges participation and involvement in The National Academies Climate Crossroads Advisory Committee, The National Academy of Medicine Grand Challenge Steering Committee, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Study Section. NO acknowledges an in-kind contract with OpenAI via their researcher access programme. MSp acknowledges funding from the Wellcome Trust (Career Development Award number 225318/Z/22/Z), the European Commission’s Horizon Europe Programme via the BrightSpace project (grant number 101060075) and the ACT4CAP project (grant number 101134874). JDSh acknowledges funding from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, the Commonwealth Fund, the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and the Yale University Planetary Solutions Initiative; has received royalties from UptoDate; has received honoraria for lectures from the University of British Columbia Department of Surgery, the George Washington University Winston Health Policy Fellowship, the Columbia University Life Cycle Assessment Bootcamp, the Weil Cornell Department of Anesthesiology, the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, Project Echo, and the University of Southern California Department of Anesthesiology and Department of Population Health; has received honoraria from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and CASCADES; has received support for travel from WHO (Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate and Health), the American Hospital Pharmacists Association, the Galien Forum, the National Academy of Medicine, the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, the British Journal of Anaesthesiology, the World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists, the American Society of Anaesthesiologists, the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, the Society for Paediatric Anaesthesiology in New Zealand and Australia/Australian and New Zealand Association of Paediatric Surgeons, the Centre for Sustainable Health and Care, University of Toronto, the Endocrine Society, the American Thoracic Society, and the International Forum on Perioperative Safety and Quality; and is the chair of the committee on environmental health for the American Society of Anesthesiologists, and the chair of the sustainability committee for the World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists. JDSt acknowledges a grant from the Health Effects Institute (no funds were used in connection with the writing of the report). CT received funding from the European Commission’s Horizon Europe Programme (CATALYSE and EXPANSE projects) and from the Health Effects Institute; and has received payment for a lecture as part of the G7 satellite event related to climate change and health: Turning Goals into Actions: Research and Innovation for climate change mitigation; organised by the Municipality of Taranto. JT has received honoraria from the University of Oulu, Finland; and has received funding from the Research Council of Finland (T-Winning Spaces 2035 project), the UK Medical Research Council (PICNIC project), the Finnish Ministry of the Environment (SEASON project), and Business Finland (GIANT project). ME acknowledges fees received from AstraZeneca, Asc Academics, and the UK National Health Service for personal consulting; and has received support for travel from the US National Academy of Medicine. PJB, KAM, and RNS received support for travel from the Wellcome Trust via the Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change grant (grant number 304972/Z/23/Z). AC received support from the Wellcome Trust via ‘The Lancet Countdown: Tracking Progress on Health and Climate Change’ Wellcome Trust grant (grant number 304972/Z/23/Z) to attend the 2025 World Health Assembly; and has involvement as chair of the data safety monitoring board for the TARA trial in Delhi, India (ended in 2023). HM acknowledges his role as unpaid Charity Trustee and colead for sustainability of the UK Intensive Care Society. KAM acknowledges his role as board member of the Soulsby Foundation and his role as scientific committee member of the Regenerative Society Foundation. All other authors declare no competing interests.