With delegates from around the world and across the private sector and civil society gathered in Berlin for the 2024 World Health Summit, the IRC is calling attention to the various ways that violent conflict and the climate crisis are worsening public health challenges globally. 

The convergence of violent conflict and climate change is fueling an alarming deterioration of public health in many of the most vulnerable contexts around the world. The IRC has identified 16 countries in which that convergence is especially pronounced. Those countries account for 10.5% of the total global population but a staggering 71.1% of people in humanitarian need. 

At the same time and in the face of clear evidence that both conflict and climate disasters are damaging public health globally, less than 5% of all climate adaptation financing goes to the health sector and only a quarter of that insufficient share is directed to fragile settings. A bad situation is getting worse and the necessary, limited resources being directed toward it are not being expended in a way that reaches those who need them most urgently. 

Several examples of the ways conflict and climate change are directly causing public health catastrophes and how the IRC and others are responding include: 

The international community must prioritize the efficient and precise use of resources to more effectively tackle the ways that conflict and climate change are deepening public health crises around the world. Proven, scalable solutions like childhood immunization programs, investments in infection prevention and control and support for local systems geared toward malnutrition treatment and food security are all potent examples of the way forward.