Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies

Occupational hazards associated with climate change are increasingly alarming, with the most vulnerable categories of workers particularly at risk. Deaths caused from excessive heat and other climate-related dangers, such as extreme weather events, air pollution and vector-borne diseases are on the...

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Main Author: Cyril Cosme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut Veolia Environnement 2025-01-01
Series:Field Actions Science Reports
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7677
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author Cyril Cosme
author_facet Cyril Cosme
author_sort Cyril Cosme
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description Occupational hazards associated with climate change are increasingly alarming, with the most vulnerable categories of workers particularly at risk. Deaths caused from excessive heat and other climate-related dangers, such as extreme weather events, air pollution and vector-borne diseases are on the rise, with workers in the most at-risk sectors, such as the construction industry and agriculture, hit the hardest. The impacts are greater in countries of the global south where many people work outdoors and standards of protection are inadequate.In this interview, Cyril Cosme, director of the French office of the International Labour Organization (ILO), discusses the risks related to climate change that workers face and describes the ILO’s role in documenting these risks, drawing up standards for protecting workers and helping governments implement them, especially in countries that lack the capacity to manage these challenges alone.
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spelling doaj-art-d17eb232098447b98e09496dea091b542025-01-30T11:24:36ZengInstitut Veolia EnvironnementField Actions Science Reports1867-139X1867-85212025-01-01273640Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategiesCyril CosmeOccupational hazards associated with climate change are increasingly alarming, with the most vulnerable categories of workers particularly at risk. Deaths caused from excessive heat and other climate-related dangers, such as extreme weather events, air pollution and vector-borne diseases are on the rise, with workers in the most at-risk sectors, such as the construction industry and agriculture, hit the hardest. The impacts are greater in countries of the global south where many people work outdoors and standards of protection are inadequate.In this interview, Cyril Cosme, director of the French office of the International Labour Organization (ILO), discusses the risks related to climate change that workers face and describes the ILO’s role in documenting these risks, drawing up standards for protecting workers and helping governments implement them, especially in countries that lack the capacity to manage these challenges alone.https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7677
spellingShingle Cyril Cosme
Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
Field Actions Science Reports
title Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
title_full Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
title_fullStr Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
title_short Climate change and occupational health: Escalating risks and prevention strategies
title_sort climate change and occupational health escalating risks and prevention strategies
url https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7677
work_keys_str_mv AT cyrilcosme climatechangeandoccupationalhealthescalatingrisksandpreventionstrategies