The maximum impact of the climate crisis on the elderly, the UN report

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The maximum impact of the climate crisis on the elderly, the UN report

The report of Frontiers 2025 has analyzed rapidly growing threats, such as temperature, flood, melting glaciers and worn -out infrastructure, especially at risk that highly and sensitive classes high and unequal.

The report also revealed that since the decade of the decade, people aged 655 or older have increased by about 85% of death due to heat.

Climate crisis is deep on the elderly population

“Floods, floods and ice melting are one of the most serious effects of climate change,” the report said.

According to the report that older people often face chronic diseases, have difficulty in walking or physical weakness, they face severe threats in burning heat.

Living in contaminated, crowded cities or coastal areas increases these threats, where the elders have more population and the sea level is constantly increasing.

© Unsplash/Christina Gotardi

Report of recommendations

The report is advised to make cities pollution -free, strong and accessible to the Universal, where there is sufficient presence in the green region.

These include big strategies to ensure better-planned urban development, community-based disaster risk management and better access to climate information for the elderly population.

In the beginning of 2021, the UN Human Rights Council passed a new resolution, under which a compulsory legal document will be prepared for the elderly at the international level about human rights.

This is a step that is considered important to ensure human protection in the face of the maximum impact of climate change.

Molten

Another serious warning of the report is that thousands of years old viruses, bacteria and fungi can be reactivated by swallowing glasses and permanent frozen soil.

At the same time, revival germs, antimicrobial resistance may increase, which will make the treatment of infection difficult.

Glacier is facing severe damage to the economy, ecosystem and community.

The reports related to the re -activation of the chemical substances were clearly identified, which was due to their serious risk, decades ago by the ban.

However, these chemicals are buried in Poly for years and may come to the surface due to flood.

When flood water revolves the rise of soil and ruins, these toxic chemicals can be activated again and enter the urban region or food supply system, which can cause serious harm to both health and the environment.

In the report, many effective measures are recommended to reduce this increasing danger such as the traditional flood control structure, better sewage system, regular monitoring of pollution and studying the economic effects of such pollution.

Many people have been killed as a result of floods in taxus.

Dilated dam and environmental crisis

This report indicates a new threat – the risk of old and garbage dams. These dams, although they provide irrigation and electricity facilities, can cause severe damage to the tribal community, fisheries and ecosystems.

According to the report, the tendency to remove these national unsafe and Okzo dams is increasing, the report says.

It restores the natural flow of the rivers and helps to restore biodiversity and ecosystem, which is consistent with the UN ecological recovery initiative.

The verb is required

This seventh version of the report is part of the UNEP’s foresight trajectory initiative. This report not only identifies the rapidly emerging environmental threat, but also presents their potential solutions.

The first report published in the Covid -19 epidemics four years ago on 24 2016 warned about the risk of zonotic disease.

This report of 2025 comes at a time when areas like Asia, Europe and the United States are fighting burning heat and record-ravages.

This year’s message is equally sharp and clear: time is coming out of our hands.

“We have a solution, we can protect the elders, restore the ecosystem, and avoid the disaster related to the subsequent climate – but it is only possible when we take immediate and decisionful steps.”