Governments Are Failing to Act on Deadly Combination of Super Pollutants and Heat 16/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji A black carbon monitoring station at a glacier in Nepal has recorded the effects of black carbon on melting ice. BANGKOK – The combination of heat and “super pollutants” is emerging as a critical threat to human health, according to experts at the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference which ended last Friday in Bangkok. Short-lived super pollutants – methane, black carbon, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), nitrous oxide and ground-level ozone – contribute to half of global warming and millions of premature deaths. These pollutants have a short life span, but some can be transported thousands of kilometres in days. Meanwhile, rising heat and humidity can create dangerously high heat stress temperatures and worsen the impact of breathing polluted air. “From a biological pathway perspective, one hypothesis is that heat stress may increase susceptibility to the respiratory toxicity of PM2.5 (a fine particulate matter pollutant), potentially through airway dehydration, epithelial irritation, and enhanced inflammatory responses,” Steve HL Yim, a professor of environmental health at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University, told Health Policy Watch. Long-term exposure to black carbon already heightens the risk of cancers such as lung adenocarcinoma, commonly seen in non-smokers. Short-term exposure to black carbon may exacerbate asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD or chronic lung disease), while short-term exposure to ozone may result in lung function damage. Yim’s research shows how a global increase of just 0.1 microgram/cubic metre in black carbon (soot) concentration is associated with a 12% increase in the incidence of lung adenocarcinoma, a type of lung cancer usually associated with air pollution. Risk for Global South The combination of super pollutants and heat are on the rise in many parts of the world, especially in the Global South where tropical and developing nations are struggling to balance climate change adaptation while pursuing rapid development. “The situation in Southeast Asia, South Asia and Africa is worse compared with North America and Europe,” said Yim, who is an expert member of the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Global Air Pollution and Health Technical Advisory Group. The risk is threefold, Yim explained. First, the emissions in the three regions are high. Second, the latest technologies take time to be transferred to the three regions. Third, there is no regulation or standard, measurement network in the three regions. Trans-boundary air pollution in South East Asia already causes health problems, and hot weather in these regions could create a “synergistic health effect… (that is) very serious”. Professor Steve Yim from Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University The sources of super pollutants are all around us. Black carbon comes from burning biomass and fossil fuels; methane from waste, cattle, agriculture, and industry; ozone indirectly from vehicles thanks to a chemical reaction between heat and vehicular exhaust; and HFCs from sectors such as refrigeration and air conditioning. Tackling these pollutants can be highly effective, according to Jane Burston, CEO of the Clean Air Fund, a global philanthropy. “Half of the global warming that we have experienced to date is because of super pollutants,” said Burston. “Because they don’t spend very long in the atmosphere, the quicker we can reduce them, the quicker this will impact climate change, which is why they’ve come to be known as the emergency brake on climate change.” Burston says preventing super-pollutants could potentially avoid more than half a degree of warming by 2050 and prevent millions of premature deaths. Air pollution was linked to over eight million deaths in 2021. Convincing governments to act Development and funding agencies spoke candidly, calling on governments to step up national action and regional cooperation, which can be hard given the tension between several neighbours. Patrick Bueker, senior technical advisor at the German Society for International Cooperation (GIZ), called for a “carrot-and-stick approach” for policymakers. The “carrot” involves demonstrating the benefits of regional co-operation in Southeast Asia, such as sharing best practices and data. Bueker suggested a new regional declaration, building on the existing Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) agreement on transboundary haze. The “stick” requires citizens to “push policymakers into acting on air pollution. We haven’t seen any improvement in the region,” Bueker said. While the effects of particulate matter (PM2.5) is well known, there is less awareness of ozone, which affects health and agricultural productivity. An informed public can “push policymakers to action”. From left: Clyde Hutchinson (ADB-Korea Climate Technology Hub), Patrick Bueker (GIZ) and Parth Sarathi Mahapatra (ICIMOD) with Jane Burston, Clean Air Fund CEO (right). Citizen science vital for air pollution Clyde Hutchinson of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) identifies citizen science as a major opportunity, emphasising this as key to shared responsibilities: “Technology is accessible and cheap, (air pollution) sensors are cheap. We can do everything on our phone; all of us can be climate scientists now.” Hutchinson says his role as a technology specialist of the ADB-Korea Climate Technology Hub is to “match-make” funding and technology with policy action. “There’s no challenge with technology or funding. So what is going wrong here? Why can’t we get these programs underway? And that’s part of my job. How do we match both the funding and the technology?” asked Hutchinson. Complicated regional dynamics The impact of open and biomass burning and fossil fuel combustion, mainly in India and Nepal, has already accelerated the melting of Himalayan glaciers. A pollution monitoring station on a Nepalese glacier at approximately 5,000 metres above sea level captured proof of this, and the culprit is black carbon. The Indo-Gangetic Plain-Himalayan Foothills region is one of the largest, most polluted airsheds in the world, and is also in a politically sensitive neighbourhood. A key agency, the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), working on air quality, has a difficult task as two of its member, Pakistan and Afghanistan, are engaged in conflict. Political co-operation remains unlikely even though ICIMOD has shepherded an air quality agreement – the Thimphu Outcome. Separately, the World Bank is providing hundreds of millions of dollars as loans across the countries. Despite the tensions, ICIMOD representative Parth Sarathi Mahapatra says countries “could come together voluntarily to form a cooperation platform.” Mahapatra, an air pollution mitigation specialist, says scientific evidence as provided from the Himalayan glacier and customising solutions from a local to the national level could encourage South Asian policy makers to act on super pollutants. Black carbon alone is affecting the richest source of freshwater, after the poles, for millions of people downstream from the glaciers. Against rising heat, government action can no longer afford to proceed at a glacial pace. Image Credits: Nanyang Technological University, Chetan Bhattacharji. Deepening Middle East Conflict Displaces Millions; Threatens Water and Air Quality 13/03/2026 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A Beirut shelter for displaced Lebanese – across the region an estimated four million people have been uprooted from their homes. The deepening conflict across the Middle East has displaced nearly 3.2 million people in Iran, according to new estimates by UNHCR, as well as nearly 800,000 people in Lebanon, mostly in the southern region, according to a new WHO situation report. After the Lebanese Shi’ite militia Hezbollah entered the war on 2 March firing barrages of rockets at northern Israel, Israel struck back with multiple evacuation orders and intense air strikes on Hezbollah strongholds in the country’s southern region, as well as Beirut’s Dahiya quarter, which are still continuing. Health services in some 50 clinics and five hospitals in southern Lebanon have been suspended, WHO said, with 25 attacks on Lebanese health care facilities across the country, leading to 16 deaths, as of 11 March. WHO has verified 18 attacks on health care since 28 February, resulting in 8 deaths among health workers. Over the same period in Lebanon, 25 attacks on health care have resulted in 16 deaths and 29 injuries. Israel’s northern region, under almost hourly Hezbollah bombardment since 2 March, has also seen population displacement. Northern and central Israel, targeted by missiles daily, has seen the suspension of all but critical health operations – which have largely moved underground. Toxic smoke covers Tehran Tehran covered by toxic smoke at 8 a.m. on 8 March. Meanwhile, analysts are increasingly worried about the risk of severe environmental health hazards if the region’s sensitive water and oil infrastructure is further damaged in the conflict. Iran’s capital, Tehran, was covered for two days by a blanket of toxic air pollution last week from after air strikes last week on one of the city’s main oil depots. “Petroleum fires and smoke from damaged infrastructure exposed nearby communities to toxic pollutants that potentially cause breathing problems, eye and skin irritation, and contaminated water and food sources,” noted WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office in a situation analysis released on Wednesday, the first since the war began on 28 February with a joint US-Israeli attack on key military and strategic targets that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei. Water desalination infrastructure threatened Dubai’s downtown and tourism industry are sustained by dozens of water desalination plants. Both Iran and Bahrain have seen airstrikes on sensitive water desalination infrastructure over the past week including: UAE (2-3 March 2026): Damage from an Iranian strike was reported near Doha’s Fujairah F1 power and water complex (UAE), although the plant itself was not damaged. Iranian strikes on Dubai’s Jebel Ali port also reportedly hit close to a massive complex of some 43 desalination units that are key to the city’s drinking water production. Kuwait (2 March) – At Kuwait’s Doha West plant, falling debris from an intercepted drone caused a minor fire at its power and water desalination station. Qeshm Island, Iran (March 7, 2026): Iran accused the U.S. of striking a desalination plant, affecting the water supply for 30 villages. Bahrain (March 8, 2026): Bahrain reported that an Iranian drone attack caused material damage to one of its desalination plants. The spectre of more such attacks would be a “nightmarish” scenario for both water-stressed Iran as well as Gulf States that depend overwhelmingly on desalination for drinking water supplies, in the words of one Gulf-based media outlet, The Straits Times. Occupied Gaza and the West Bank Some 42,000 Gazans will need prolonged rehabilitation care and support due to war-related trauma injuries and amputations. In Gaza, medical evacuations for treatment abroad remain suspended since 28 February, while hospitals continue to operate under strain amid ongoing shortages of medicines, medical supplies and fuel, which is being rationed to prioritize essential health services such as emergency and trauma care, maternal and neonatal services, and management of communicable diseases. In the occupied West Bank, increased movement restrictions and checkpoint closures are delaying ambulance and mobile clinics’ access across several governorates, WHO reported in its update. Israeli settler extremists have also seized upon the chaos of the war to ramp up attacks on Palestinian West Bank settlements, while uniformed soldiers turn a blind eye or even cooperate. At least six Palestinians have been killed since the beginning of March – five by settlers and one by the Israeli military. Disruptions to WHO emergency shipments The war in Iran has paralyzed the delivery of WHO supplies from Dubai’s international humanitarian hub, the world’s largest. Temporary airspace restrictions have continued to disrupt the movement of medical supplies from WHO’s global logistics hub in Dubai. More than 50 emergency supply requests, intended to benefit over 1.5 million people across 25 countries, are affected, said WHO in its update. Current priority shipments include supplies planned for Al Arish, Egypt, to support the Gaza response, as well as Lebanon and Afghanistan. “he first shipment, containing cholera response supplies for Mozambique, is expected to depart from the hub in the coming week.” Iran’s use of cluster munitions against Israel In its attacks on Israel, Iran has also increasingly resorted to the use of cluster munitions which explode and scatter over many kilometers of civilian areas. Israelis spending the night in an underground train station to avoid Iranian missiles. The weapons are largely banned by international law – although neither Israel or Iran have signed the agreement. Nor have the United States, Russia, China and India. The combined potential risks of Hizbullah rockets and the widely scattered bomblets from just one Iranian missile have sent millions of Israelis into shelters multiple times a day over the past two weeks, with those in the biggest hotspots relocating underground, as well as destroying homes, damaging transport arteries – and causing a number of deaths. The documented use of cluster munitions by Iran, as well as other impacts of the war on civilian targets and healthcare operations in Israel, Cyprus, Turkey or other countries in the Eastern Mediterranean region are not included in the regional assessment by WHO’s EMRO regional office – because they are all members of the WHO’s European Region. Damage was caused at at least three sites in central Israel in Iran’s cluster bomb missile attack this evening, according to first responders. One of the impacts, possibly by a sub-munition or other fragments, sparked a blaze on the roof of a building in a central town. A… pic.twitter.com/N5f0l4QhgR — Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) March 13, 2026 WHO Emergency Assessments – a regional or HQ product? When asked why WHO assessments on the ongoing Gulf War, as well as other cross-regional events, are published solely by the EMRO region – rather than one from Headquarters, which could provide a more inclusive,. cross-regional perspective, a WHO spokesperson said that typically WHO emergency situation assessments are published by WHO’s regional offices because they are closer to the emergency at hand. However, that’s not always the case. For instance, African emergency issues are typically published on the WHO Headquarters Emergency site – rather than the African regional site – such as this January update on the health and humanitarian crisis triggered by the war in Sudan. Over the past two weeks of war, there have been over 1,885 deaths from the war according to WHO. More than ten days into the recent escalation of conflict in the Middle East, health systems are under immense strain. Reports indicate over 1,300 deaths and 9,000 injuries in Iran, at least 570 deaths and over 1,400 injuries in Lebanon, and 15 deaths with 2,142 injuries in… pic.twitter.com/sBwcy86clg — Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) March 11, 2026 “The situation is terrible for the whole region and civilians are the ones suffering the most, including in the health sector,” the WHO spokesperson said. Image Credits: https://x.com/HananBalkhy/status/2032121759814517168/photo/1, X/Mohamed Safa@mhdksafa, Dubai Economy and Tourism Bureau., WHO/EMRO , Dubai Humanitarian , Instagram/AFP . How Public Health Lost the Narrative – and How It Can Win It Back 12/03/2026 Steve Hamill Rock icon Elvis Presley getting his polio vaccination in 1956, as New York City Commissioner of Health Leona Baumgartner (right) held his arm and Assistant Commissioner Harold Fuerst administered the vaccine. His public vaccination massively boosted polio immunisation. Public health ended 2025 in one of its weakest positions in living memory – not because of a surge in disease, but because of a collapse in political, financial, and cultural support. Vaccination policies long considered settled science are being reversed, and industry-backed “junk science” is shaping legislation to derail proven nutrition policies. Even as storied public health entities are being dismantled, the tobacco industry – still responsible for eight million deaths each year – faces little resistance in its cynical PR effort to reposition itself as a champion for health. These are not isolated policy defeats. They are symptoms of a deeper problem: public health has lost its relevance in the public narrative. For decades, harmful industries have poured billions into persuasion, addicting people to sugar, alcohol, and tobacco. Public health, meanwhile, has organized around the assumption that evidence alone can carry policy goals. That may have worked in an era dominated by elite opinion makers driving consensus through limited broadcast media channels and operating with institutional trust. But today’s media landscape—driven by algorithms, influencers, and coordinated narrative warfare – requires something different. The field isn’t losing because the science is weak; it is losing because it has treated communications as a garnish rather than as an engine for impact. While our opponents invest in persuasion as a primary tool, public health has largely disinvested in communication as a core infrastructure. This wasn’t inevitable. Public health’s greatest victories once depended on grassroots education and mass mobilization that shaped the cultural conversation. In 1956, Elvis Presley’s televised polio vaccination helped skyrocket teen uptake from nearly zero to 80%. In the 1980s and ’90s, “Silence=Death” graphics and the art of Keith Haring transformed the HIV/AIDS crisis into a global movement for human rights. Keith Haring’s Ignorance = Fear artwork. These moments proved that narrative power is as essential to public health as any laboratory breakthrough. And they can be again; the field of public health is poised for realignment. Here’s how it can happen: The power of culture and influence Evidence does not “speak” on its own; it requires a deliberate strategy to compete for attention. Industries that profit from harmful products use real-time social listening, test narrative frames the way pharmaceutical companies test molecules, and deploy influencers who reach audiences no government agency can reach. They communicate emotionally and strategically, aided by an unregulated attention economy in which algorithms reward outrage and accelerate falsehoods. Public health must recognize that population health and policy follow culture, not evidence. Today, the main battleground is the “content creator economy.” Remarkable voices, from doctors debunking junk science to creators sharing lived experiences, are proving that health can gain traction there. These talented communicators are the modern heirs to the activist-artists of the past; with support, they could help truth compete at the scale of weaponized disinformation of both industry and grifter economy. Communication as essential infrastructure The path forward requires a fundamental shift in how we define public health “work.” Leaders must decide to fund communication as essential infrastructure, positioned alongside epidemiology, policy development and providing equitable access to high-quality care. This is not about one-off marketing budgets, but about building a core capability that is permanent and professionalized. Financing is often cited as a barrier, but it is political will that is the most important resource. Many countries, cities, and states have already found practical ways to sustain this work, and these could be scaled and more explicitly tied to health. From health foundations and taxes on alcohol and tobacco, to reclaiming public airwaves or redirecting settlement agreements from industry litigation, mechanisms for significant funding exist. The challenge is ensuring these resources are used to strengthen health infrastructure – including public engagement systems needed to address the harms caused by these industries. Ironically, more public visibility and engagement are win/win competencies in the battle to secure resources to better engage the public. Los Angeles County in the US is using some of the people they have helped to overcome health challenges to humanize health policy. What would it look like to treat communication as core infrastructure—on par with labs, data systems, or clinical delivery? Three priorities would define the work ahead: 1. Building professional communication and community engagement capacity within health departments. Modern public health requires full-time professional teams with the budget and authority to run campaigns at scale – comparable to the capacity currently reserved for disease surveillance. Health departments hold a unique strategic advantage: access to the authentic, local stories that humanize policy. Experience in jurisdictions like Los Angeles County shows that when health departments move beyond data dissemination and integrate narrative storytelling, they can successfully reclaim the local conversation from digital noise. 2. Integrating public health with the creator economy. Since many of the most trusted messengers now exist outside of government, public health must develop the infrastructure to collaborate with digital creators while maintaining scientific integrity. Success in this area depends on meeting audiences where they already are. For instance, we see young people leveraging lifestyle themes, using fashion TikToks or travel videos on Instagram to effectively communicate the risks of nicotine to younger audiences who are otherwise unreachable through traditional channels. 3. Shifting from dissemination to community co-creation. Trust is not built through top-down messaging, but through genuine dialogue. The next generation of public health initiatives must move from “targeting” communities to “shaping” work with them. This shift ensures that campaigns are not only culturally grounded but also community-owned, turning a passive audience into active participants in their own health outcomes. Vital Strategies collaborated with the US National Black Harm Reduction Network on a campaign to make naxolone, a spray that can reverse drug overdoses, widely available. Reclaiming the ‘public’ in public health The fundamental truth of 2025 is that for too long public health has retreated into technical, cautious communication – messages optimized for scientific accuracy rather than for the anxieties and daily realities that shape people’s lives. As institutions grew quieter and more inscrutable, a communication vacuum emerged – one that the public naturally filled by turning to more responsive voices, often belonging to industries and ideologues and supercharged by platforms that reward attention and disregard truth. Public health is facing existential challenges, and it may seem far-fetched to include prioritizing communications and public engagement among them. With a desperate shortage of resources, many argue that public health needs to trim back to what is “essential,” rather than think about doing things differently. There are worthy arguments about what public health must focus on delivering – global health security, universal health coverage, stronger lab systems – but none of these efforts can succeed without public approval, attention, and trust. Public health’s next iteration must respond to the new reality that health, social, and policy change are fundamentally rooted in public attention in a way that they never have been before. Reversing this trajectory requires reorientation. Public health must reclaim its identity not just as a scientific enterprise, but as a mobilizing one. It must participate in shaping culture and policy – not as a byproduct of producing evidence, but as a deliberate act. That responsibility falls not just to governments, but to institutions, funders, and organizations committed to protecting health in the 21st century. If we want a healthier future, we must begin with a simple truth: We need to put the public back in public health. Steve Hamill is Vice President of Policy Advocacy and Communication at Vital Strategies Image Credits: Department of Health Collection, New York City, The Haring Foundation, LA County, You Can Save Lives. Policy ‘Magic’ vs Industrial Reality in the Fight for Asia’s Breathable Air 12/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Chula Pop Bus’ is an electrically powered bus servicing students and staff of Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. The 12th Better Air Quality conference opened with a call to treat clean air as vital economic infrastructure, highlighting the large benefit-cost return – but financing clean-tech is a challenge in developing nations. BANGKOK – Short-term impacts of bad air quality don’t just cause high economic costs but also lead to children scoring poorly in tests, warned a World Bank senior official at the opening of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference on Wednesday. The option to invest in cleaner air results in healthier people and stronger economies. Failure to do so means countries will continue to bear the costs of pollution – in hospitals, in lost productivity, and in weakened economies, says Bindu Lohani, chair of Clean Air Asia, BAQ’s main organiser. A significant concern for the BAQ conference is how to increase financing for clean air action. It costs about 0.1% of regional GDP annually to roll out the most effective measures, a World Bank report estimates, while the benefit-cost ratio can be more than 9:1 for countries like Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. Lohani called on governments to treat clean air as core economic infrastructure and set targets to achieve the net-zero climate target by 2050. By 2030, governments should significantly reduce urban particulate pollution, electrify transport systems, expand monitoring, and eliminate the most polluting fuels and practices, such as agricultural and open burning, Lohani proposed. By 2040, air quality should be fully aligned with climate policy and on a path to achieve the 2050 target. The World Bank’s Ann Jeanette Glauber acknowledged that tools such as emissions inventories and enforcement capacity are “essential public goods, but they aren’t sexy”. “There’s no ribbon cutting. Often, they don’t make money, necessarily,” Glauber said, adding that the most financially viable solution is to focus on industry. “For us in South and Southeast Asia, the main sources of emissions are industries. And these need clean tech boilers, furnaces, kilns and pollution control devices,” she said, adding that there were limited resources to roll these out. Tussle over clean-tech finance Reena Gupta (centre, with microphone), chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board Reena Gupta, chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board, said there is very little money flowing into developing countries to assist with air pollution. Citing the clean tech projects presented at her panel discussion, Gupta said that while they are excellent, they are “only pilots”. In Punjab in north India, most furnaces in a town known for metal recycling are still being run on coal: “We know the clean technology exists. But it is not viable for the recycling businesses,” she said. Gupta proposed that the international finance agencies develop mechanisms to cover risk for businesses to change to cleaner technology for the first couple of years, after which costs can be borne by the business. In contrast, the World Bank’s Glauber suggested that affected countries should first leverage things like their finance policies, “then investment flows… It’s really about helping commercial finance go into those actual technologies, and you’re basically pushing them over that cost barrier so that they become financially viable.” Citing Nepal’s example, Glauber said that the government made it far cheaper to import electric than fossil fuel vehicles. It is now one of the fastest electric vehicle markets in the world, and has the second highest electric vehicle only to Norway, in terms of electric vehicle penetration. “You play with those [policy] levers, and then investment flows. Obviously, lots to be done in risk-sharing mechanisms that crowd-in private finance for industrial pollution control technology. That’s where the magic needs to happen,” Glauber said. Ann Jeannette Glauber, from the World Bank’s Environment Department (South Asia). ‘Exporting air pollution’ Wealthier nations are also offloading their obsolete and polluting products in the region. “We have had to shut down a few tyre pyrolysis units (in Punjab) that were not deploying proper air pollution control devices. Latest reports have shown that waste tyres are being sent to India from the UK and the Middle East. This is becoming a big source of black carbon, a super pollutant,” she told Health Policy Watch. A study by philanthropic organisation Clean Air Fund (CAF) shows that measures to prevent air pollution are massively underfunded and funding does not reach populations with the highest exposure. Despite the 9:1 benefit-cost advantage, and despite studies that put premature deaths because of air pollution at 8.1 million in 2021, air quality solutions receive 1% of international development funding, according to CAF. This too saw a 20% decrease between 2022 and 2023. Bangkok is turning the tide on air pollution The BAQ was last held in Bangkok 18 years ago. City officials say much has changed since then. Along with the economy and skyline growing, air pollution is a “visible” problem. “On the worst days, parents keep their children indoors, hospitals fill with patients, and the residents lose their trust that the government is doing anything at all,” says PornphromVikitsreth Techapaiboon, chief sustainability officer of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, speaking at the opening session. But there have been measurable improvements in the last year in reducing PM2.5 pollution, he added. The number of “orange and red’ (poor air quality) days has almost halved since 2015 and the PM2.5 concentration fell from nearly 50 micrograms per cubic metre to 37.6, a 22% decrease. These, he says, are “genuine turning points” and that “PM2.5-related patients have decreased in January.” The causes of air pollution are unfavourable geography (Bangkok is in a basin), vehicular, especially diesel pollution, and biomass burning, as shown by their “dust detective” teams with experts from academia and civil society organisations. This has led Bangkok to create an air quality strategy, declaring itself last year to be a pollution control zone. This includes working with upwind provinces where biomass is burnt, leading to more burn-free days. It introduced a ‘green list’ for heavy trucks that are banned from Bangkok unless they can show evidence of recent maintenance. Industrial monitoring is being ramped up. A portable air quality monitor on display at BAQ 2026 in Bangkok Pornphrom says they’re investing in green spaces, not just for aesthetics, but as a public health intervention. PM2.5 levels inside parks are 33-43% lower than in surrounding areas. They message seven-day PM2.5 forecasts and are installing ‘clean air rooms’ in schools. Thailand is emerging as a test case for integrated air quality and climate investment, the conference heard. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) presented a proposed Thailand Integrated Air Quality Investment Program. The proposal outlines a 10-year investment platform aligned with Thailand’s PM2.5 Action Plan and forthcoming Clean Air Act, designed to bring together multiple sectors under a single framework.Priority areas include transport electrification, crop residue management, renewable energy expansion and industrial emission standards. The ADB referenced a programme in Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei in China, where coordinated action across sectors, including fuel switching, clean heating, and industrial upgrading, helped reduce PM2.5 levels by around 40% compared to 2015. At the city level, Bangkok also highlighted the need for sustained partnerships. “Air pollution is a complex challenge that no single city can solve alone. Sustainable air quality improvement requires long-term investment and strong international collaboration,” said Pornthep. Image Credits: UN Thailand, Chetan Bhattacharji. Global Fund Faces $5bn Shortfall as France Slashes Support, EU Delays Pledge 11/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The Global Fund’s eighth replenishment secured $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Battered by a 58% cut from France, a delayed European Union (EU) pledge, and a US pullback, the Global Fund faces a significant shortfall, securing $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target during the 8th replenishment. According to the organization, reaching the full target would have prevented roughly 400 million new AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria infections between 2027 and 2029. Despite this compounding retreat, executive director Peter Sands praised the final tally as a “remarkable result, achieved in a challenging global context.” Significant changes in global health financing have forced a strategic shift, introduced in late 2025, toward the poorest nations bearing the heaviest disease burdens, while placing middle-income countries on accelerated transition timelines toward national self-reliance. “It’s our duty to steer the partnership through this period of uncertainty in a way that protects sustainability, preserves impact, and ensures that the Global Fund continues to deliver for the people and communities we serve,” said Roslyn Morauta, chair of the Global Fund Board, at the 54th Board meeting in February 2026. To manage the Global Fund shortfall, the board approved $10.78 billion in core country allocations for the 2027-2029 implementation period. To maximize the impact of the remaining funds, the board also earmarked $260 million for “catalytic investments” designed to expand access to innovative health products. Executive leadership stressed the urgent need to prioritize these game-changing biomedical innovations, specifically highlighting the continued scale-up of the HIV prevention tool Lenacapavir, alongside new molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis and advanced vector control tools for malaria. French budgetary constraints compound shortfall Driven by domestic fiscal pressure, France’s contribution to the Global Fund plummeted by 58%. The Global Fund shortfall is compounded by a broader shift towards fiscal restraint and budgetary scrutiny across major Western nations. France has traditionally stood as the second-largest contributor to the institution, having regularly increased its support with successive 20% bumps during the previous two replenishment cycles. But, as first reported by franceinfo, the state has now decided to severely slash its international health budget, reducing its financial contribution by 58% for the upcoming cycle, down from the €1.6 billion it previously provided. In a response to a query by Health Policy Watch, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs framed the retreat as a fiscal necessity, citing a mandate to cap the public deficit at 5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2026, demanding significant budgetary efforts across all government sectors. Despite the cut signaling a shift in priorities, the ministry stressed that these temporary financial constraints should not be interpreted as a principled retreat from multilateralism. “The reduction in French investments in global health must be understood in this context, which in no way calls into question our commitment in this area,” stated the Quai d’Orsay in its response. As the pledge is yet to be finalised, the French government insists that global health remains a crucial concern, with the ministry noting that health was recently confirmed as one of France’s “10 priority political objectives” for solidarity investments, specifically aimed at strengthening pandemic resilience and primary health systems. The current intense budgetary pressure stems from the legislative instability gripping President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. After losing its parliamentary majority, the fragmented centrist government only managed to pass the 2026 budget by utilizing a special constitutional tool to bypass a standard vote. EU caught in a budget deadlock The EU Commission remains in a budget deadlock, delaying a multi-year pledge to the Global Fund despite previous announcements. The impact of the Global Fund shortfall is exacerbated by the European Commission’s continued inability to pledge any commitments, a deadlock extending through the February 2026 board meeting. The European bloc missed the formal November 2025 pledging summit, claiming it could not legally secure a multi-year pledge because the replenishment cycle falls between two long-term EU budgets, the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). The current MFF ends 2027, the new framework from 2028-2034 is yet to be formally adopted. According to recent budget hearings, the European Commission formulated a workaround and intended to officially pledge €700 million over a four-year span at the February board meeting. However, the Commission experienced an ongoing delay in formalizing this pledge by the time the board convened, research by Health Policy Watch confirms. This delay comes as the European Parliament warns of severe constraints and a “very limited level of availabilities” as the bloc approaches the final year of its current 2021-2027 long-term budget. EXCLUSIVE: EU to Pledge €700 Million to Global Fund, Less Than Previous Years Even if this severely delayed pledge eventually materializes, stretching it over four years instead of three would represent a significant funding reduction of approximately 26.5% on an annualized basis. Furthermore, the European Commission has confirmed there will be no dedicated “health window” to ringfence budget appropriations in the upcoming long-term budget. Other major donors had already drastically cut their contributions to the Global Fund, fundamentally altering the global health financing landscape. Driven primarily by an inward-looking “America First” political strategy, the US commitment fell from $6 billion in the seventh replenishment to just $4.6 billion in the eighth. Private sector growth cannot counter cuts A health worker in Gyabankrom, Ghana, prepares a malaria vaccine. Despite the shortfall from major donors, the latest replenishment cycle yielded encouraging progress from alternative sources. The global private sector and various philanthropic organizations stepped forward, successfully mobilizing $1.34 billion for the eighth replenishment. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintained its role as the premier private global donor by pledging $912 million. Other corporate actors stepped up to fund vital localized health initiatives, including a £6 million joint financial pledge from GSK and ViiV Healthcare. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) pledged $50 million to accelerate the rollout of innovative tuberculosis diagnostics across affected regions. Goodbye Malaria also reaffirmed its leadership with a $5.5 million contribution to sustain targeted malaria elimination efforts in Eswatini, Mozambique, and South Africa. However, while private funding sits at a record high, it cannot structurally replace the loss of sovereign anchor donors. Even with the $1.34 billion private surge, the overall replenishment total remains more than $5 billion short of the necessary goal to defeat these diseases. African states stepping up Demonstrating a surge in sovereign agency, several African nations have increased or maintained their Global Fund commitments, including South Africa and Nigeria. African states are stepping up, taking a larger financial stake in their health systems. Uganda maintained its previous funding levels with a $3 million pledge, which African diplomats celebrated as a powerful demonstration of the continent’s shared responsibility. This contribution from Uganda is part of a broader, encouraging trend of African implementer-donors actively increasing their domestic financing. South Africa more than doubled its previous commitment to pledge $26.6 million, while Nigeria increased its pledge from $13.2 million to $15 million. African diplomats have continually emphasized the critical importance of increased sovereign investment to accelerate health gains across the continent. As the global health architecture enters this new era of austerity, the structural reliance on domestic African financing will inevitably grow. Despite the current Global Fund shortfall from the West, this emerging sovereign agency offers a resilient pathway toward long-term sustainability and equitable health outcomes. Image Credits: WHO/Fanjan Combrink , Felix Sassmannshausen/Health Policy Watch, European Union. War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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Deepening Middle East Conflict Displaces Millions; Threatens Water and Air Quality 13/03/2026 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A Beirut shelter for displaced Lebanese – across the region an estimated four million people have been uprooted from their homes. The deepening conflict across the Middle East has displaced nearly 3.2 million people in Iran, according to new estimates by UNHCR, as well as nearly 800,000 people in Lebanon, mostly in the southern region, according to a new WHO situation report. After the Lebanese Shi’ite militia Hezbollah entered the war on 2 March firing barrages of rockets at northern Israel, Israel struck back with multiple evacuation orders and intense air strikes on Hezbollah strongholds in the country’s southern region, as well as Beirut’s Dahiya quarter, which are still continuing. Health services in some 50 clinics and five hospitals in southern Lebanon have been suspended, WHO said, with 25 attacks on Lebanese health care facilities across the country, leading to 16 deaths, as of 11 March. WHO has verified 18 attacks on health care since 28 February, resulting in 8 deaths among health workers. Over the same period in Lebanon, 25 attacks on health care have resulted in 16 deaths and 29 injuries. Israel’s northern region, under almost hourly Hezbollah bombardment since 2 March, has also seen population displacement. Northern and central Israel, targeted by missiles daily, has seen the suspension of all but critical health operations – which have largely moved underground. Toxic smoke covers Tehran Tehran covered by toxic smoke at 8 a.m. on 8 March. Meanwhile, analysts are increasingly worried about the risk of severe environmental health hazards if the region’s sensitive water and oil infrastructure is further damaged in the conflict. Iran’s capital, Tehran, was covered for two days by a blanket of toxic air pollution last week from after air strikes last week on one of the city’s main oil depots. “Petroleum fires and smoke from damaged infrastructure exposed nearby communities to toxic pollutants that potentially cause breathing problems, eye and skin irritation, and contaminated water and food sources,” noted WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office in a situation analysis released on Wednesday, the first since the war began on 28 February with a joint US-Israeli attack on key military and strategic targets that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei. Water desalination infrastructure threatened Dubai’s downtown and tourism industry are sustained by dozens of water desalination plants. Both Iran and Bahrain have seen airstrikes on sensitive water desalination infrastructure over the past week including: UAE (2-3 March 2026): Damage from an Iranian strike was reported near Doha’s Fujairah F1 power and water complex (UAE), although the plant itself was not damaged. Iranian strikes on Dubai’s Jebel Ali port also reportedly hit close to a massive complex of some 43 desalination units that are key to the city’s drinking water production. Kuwait (2 March) – At Kuwait’s Doha West plant, falling debris from an intercepted drone caused a minor fire at its power and water desalination station. Qeshm Island, Iran (March 7, 2026): Iran accused the U.S. of striking a desalination plant, affecting the water supply for 30 villages. Bahrain (March 8, 2026): Bahrain reported that an Iranian drone attack caused material damage to one of its desalination plants. The spectre of more such attacks would be a “nightmarish” scenario for both water-stressed Iran as well as Gulf States that depend overwhelmingly on desalination for drinking water supplies, in the words of one Gulf-based media outlet, The Straits Times. Occupied Gaza and the West Bank Some 42,000 Gazans will need prolonged rehabilitation care and support due to war-related trauma injuries and amputations. In Gaza, medical evacuations for treatment abroad remain suspended since 28 February, while hospitals continue to operate under strain amid ongoing shortages of medicines, medical supplies and fuel, which is being rationed to prioritize essential health services such as emergency and trauma care, maternal and neonatal services, and management of communicable diseases. In the occupied West Bank, increased movement restrictions and checkpoint closures are delaying ambulance and mobile clinics’ access across several governorates, WHO reported in its update. Israeli settler extremists have also seized upon the chaos of the war to ramp up attacks on Palestinian West Bank settlements, while uniformed soldiers turn a blind eye or even cooperate. At least six Palestinians have been killed since the beginning of March – five by settlers and one by the Israeli military. Disruptions to WHO emergency shipments The war in Iran has paralyzed the delivery of WHO supplies from Dubai’s international humanitarian hub, the world’s largest. Temporary airspace restrictions have continued to disrupt the movement of medical supplies from WHO’s global logistics hub in Dubai. More than 50 emergency supply requests, intended to benefit over 1.5 million people across 25 countries, are affected, said WHO in its update. Current priority shipments include supplies planned for Al Arish, Egypt, to support the Gaza response, as well as Lebanon and Afghanistan. “he first shipment, containing cholera response supplies for Mozambique, is expected to depart from the hub in the coming week.” Iran’s use of cluster munitions against Israel In its attacks on Israel, Iran has also increasingly resorted to the use of cluster munitions which explode and scatter over many kilometers of civilian areas. Israelis spending the night in an underground train station to avoid Iranian missiles. The weapons are largely banned by international law – although neither Israel or Iran have signed the agreement. Nor have the United States, Russia, China and India. The combined potential risks of Hizbullah rockets and the widely scattered bomblets from just one Iranian missile have sent millions of Israelis into shelters multiple times a day over the past two weeks, with those in the biggest hotspots relocating underground, as well as destroying homes, damaging transport arteries – and causing a number of deaths. The documented use of cluster munitions by Iran, as well as other impacts of the war on civilian targets and healthcare operations in Israel, Cyprus, Turkey or other countries in the Eastern Mediterranean region are not included in the regional assessment by WHO’s EMRO regional office – because they are all members of the WHO’s European Region. Damage was caused at at least three sites in central Israel in Iran’s cluster bomb missile attack this evening, according to first responders. One of the impacts, possibly by a sub-munition or other fragments, sparked a blaze on the roof of a building in a central town. A… pic.twitter.com/N5f0l4QhgR — Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) March 13, 2026 WHO Emergency Assessments – a regional or HQ product? When asked why WHO assessments on the ongoing Gulf War, as well as other cross-regional events, are published solely by the EMRO region – rather than one from Headquarters, which could provide a more inclusive,. cross-regional perspective, a WHO spokesperson said that typically WHO emergency situation assessments are published by WHO’s regional offices because they are closer to the emergency at hand. However, that’s not always the case. For instance, African emergency issues are typically published on the WHO Headquarters Emergency site – rather than the African regional site – such as this January update on the health and humanitarian crisis triggered by the war in Sudan. Over the past two weeks of war, there have been over 1,885 deaths from the war according to WHO. More than ten days into the recent escalation of conflict in the Middle East, health systems are under immense strain. Reports indicate over 1,300 deaths and 9,000 injuries in Iran, at least 570 deaths and over 1,400 injuries in Lebanon, and 15 deaths with 2,142 injuries in… pic.twitter.com/sBwcy86clg — Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) March 11, 2026 “The situation is terrible for the whole region and civilians are the ones suffering the most, including in the health sector,” the WHO spokesperson said. Image Credits: https://x.com/HananBalkhy/status/2032121759814517168/photo/1, X/Mohamed Safa@mhdksafa, Dubai Economy and Tourism Bureau., WHO/EMRO , Dubai Humanitarian , Instagram/AFP . How Public Health Lost the Narrative – and How It Can Win It Back 12/03/2026 Steve Hamill Rock icon Elvis Presley getting his polio vaccination in 1956, as New York City Commissioner of Health Leona Baumgartner (right) held his arm and Assistant Commissioner Harold Fuerst administered the vaccine. His public vaccination massively boosted polio immunisation. Public health ended 2025 in one of its weakest positions in living memory – not because of a surge in disease, but because of a collapse in political, financial, and cultural support. Vaccination policies long considered settled science are being reversed, and industry-backed “junk science” is shaping legislation to derail proven nutrition policies. Even as storied public health entities are being dismantled, the tobacco industry – still responsible for eight million deaths each year – faces little resistance in its cynical PR effort to reposition itself as a champion for health. These are not isolated policy defeats. They are symptoms of a deeper problem: public health has lost its relevance in the public narrative. For decades, harmful industries have poured billions into persuasion, addicting people to sugar, alcohol, and tobacco. Public health, meanwhile, has organized around the assumption that evidence alone can carry policy goals. That may have worked in an era dominated by elite opinion makers driving consensus through limited broadcast media channels and operating with institutional trust. But today’s media landscape—driven by algorithms, influencers, and coordinated narrative warfare – requires something different. The field isn’t losing because the science is weak; it is losing because it has treated communications as a garnish rather than as an engine for impact. While our opponents invest in persuasion as a primary tool, public health has largely disinvested in communication as a core infrastructure. This wasn’t inevitable. Public health’s greatest victories once depended on grassroots education and mass mobilization that shaped the cultural conversation. In 1956, Elvis Presley’s televised polio vaccination helped skyrocket teen uptake from nearly zero to 80%. In the 1980s and ’90s, “Silence=Death” graphics and the art of Keith Haring transformed the HIV/AIDS crisis into a global movement for human rights. Keith Haring’s Ignorance = Fear artwork. These moments proved that narrative power is as essential to public health as any laboratory breakthrough. And they can be again; the field of public health is poised for realignment. Here’s how it can happen: The power of culture and influence Evidence does not “speak” on its own; it requires a deliberate strategy to compete for attention. Industries that profit from harmful products use real-time social listening, test narrative frames the way pharmaceutical companies test molecules, and deploy influencers who reach audiences no government agency can reach. They communicate emotionally and strategically, aided by an unregulated attention economy in which algorithms reward outrage and accelerate falsehoods. Public health must recognize that population health and policy follow culture, not evidence. Today, the main battleground is the “content creator economy.” Remarkable voices, from doctors debunking junk science to creators sharing lived experiences, are proving that health can gain traction there. These talented communicators are the modern heirs to the activist-artists of the past; with support, they could help truth compete at the scale of weaponized disinformation of both industry and grifter economy. Communication as essential infrastructure The path forward requires a fundamental shift in how we define public health “work.” Leaders must decide to fund communication as essential infrastructure, positioned alongside epidemiology, policy development and providing equitable access to high-quality care. This is not about one-off marketing budgets, but about building a core capability that is permanent and professionalized. Financing is often cited as a barrier, but it is political will that is the most important resource. Many countries, cities, and states have already found practical ways to sustain this work, and these could be scaled and more explicitly tied to health. From health foundations and taxes on alcohol and tobacco, to reclaiming public airwaves or redirecting settlement agreements from industry litigation, mechanisms for significant funding exist. The challenge is ensuring these resources are used to strengthen health infrastructure – including public engagement systems needed to address the harms caused by these industries. Ironically, more public visibility and engagement are win/win competencies in the battle to secure resources to better engage the public. Los Angeles County in the US is using some of the people they have helped to overcome health challenges to humanize health policy. What would it look like to treat communication as core infrastructure—on par with labs, data systems, or clinical delivery? Three priorities would define the work ahead: 1. Building professional communication and community engagement capacity within health departments. Modern public health requires full-time professional teams with the budget and authority to run campaigns at scale – comparable to the capacity currently reserved for disease surveillance. Health departments hold a unique strategic advantage: access to the authentic, local stories that humanize policy. Experience in jurisdictions like Los Angeles County shows that when health departments move beyond data dissemination and integrate narrative storytelling, they can successfully reclaim the local conversation from digital noise. 2. Integrating public health with the creator economy. Since many of the most trusted messengers now exist outside of government, public health must develop the infrastructure to collaborate with digital creators while maintaining scientific integrity. Success in this area depends on meeting audiences where they already are. For instance, we see young people leveraging lifestyle themes, using fashion TikToks or travel videos on Instagram to effectively communicate the risks of nicotine to younger audiences who are otherwise unreachable through traditional channels. 3. Shifting from dissemination to community co-creation. Trust is not built through top-down messaging, but through genuine dialogue. The next generation of public health initiatives must move from “targeting” communities to “shaping” work with them. This shift ensures that campaigns are not only culturally grounded but also community-owned, turning a passive audience into active participants in their own health outcomes. Vital Strategies collaborated with the US National Black Harm Reduction Network on a campaign to make naxolone, a spray that can reverse drug overdoses, widely available. Reclaiming the ‘public’ in public health The fundamental truth of 2025 is that for too long public health has retreated into technical, cautious communication – messages optimized for scientific accuracy rather than for the anxieties and daily realities that shape people’s lives. As institutions grew quieter and more inscrutable, a communication vacuum emerged – one that the public naturally filled by turning to more responsive voices, often belonging to industries and ideologues and supercharged by platforms that reward attention and disregard truth. Public health is facing existential challenges, and it may seem far-fetched to include prioritizing communications and public engagement among them. With a desperate shortage of resources, many argue that public health needs to trim back to what is “essential,” rather than think about doing things differently. There are worthy arguments about what public health must focus on delivering – global health security, universal health coverage, stronger lab systems – but none of these efforts can succeed without public approval, attention, and trust. Public health’s next iteration must respond to the new reality that health, social, and policy change are fundamentally rooted in public attention in a way that they never have been before. Reversing this trajectory requires reorientation. Public health must reclaim its identity not just as a scientific enterprise, but as a mobilizing one. It must participate in shaping culture and policy – not as a byproduct of producing evidence, but as a deliberate act. That responsibility falls not just to governments, but to institutions, funders, and organizations committed to protecting health in the 21st century. If we want a healthier future, we must begin with a simple truth: We need to put the public back in public health. Steve Hamill is Vice President of Policy Advocacy and Communication at Vital Strategies Image Credits: Department of Health Collection, New York City, The Haring Foundation, LA County, You Can Save Lives. Policy ‘Magic’ vs Industrial Reality in the Fight for Asia’s Breathable Air 12/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Chula Pop Bus’ is an electrically powered bus servicing students and staff of Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. The 12th Better Air Quality conference opened with a call to treat clean air as vital economic infrastructure, highlighting the large benefit-cost return – but financing clean-tech is a challenge in developing nations. BANGKOK – Short-term impacts of bad air quality don’t just cause high economic costs but also lead to children scoring poorly in tests, warned a World Bank senior official at the opening of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference on Wednesday. The option to invest in cleaner air results in healthier people and stronger economies. Failure to do so means countries will continue to bear the costs of pollution – in hospitals, in lost productivity, and in weakened economies, says Bindu Lohani, chair of Clean Air Asia, BAQ’s main organiser. A significant concern for the BAQ conference is how to increase financing for clean air action. It costs about 0.1% of regional GDP annually to roll out the most effective measures, a World Bank report estimates, while the benefit-cost ratio can be more than 9:1 for countries like Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. Lohani called on governments to treat clean air as core economic infrastructure and set targets to achieve the net-zero climate target by 2050. By 2030, governments should significantly reduce urban particulate pollution, electrify transport systems, expand monitoring, and eliminate the most polluting fuels and practices, such as agricultural and open burning, Lohani proposed. By 2040, air quality should be fully aligned with climate policy and on a path to achieve the 2050 target. The World Bank’s Ann Jeanette Glauber acknowledged that tools such as emissions inventories and enforcement capacity are “essential public goods, but they aren’t sexy”. “There’s no ribbon cutting. Often, they don’t make money, necessarily,” Glauber said, adding that the most financially viable solution is to focus on industry. “For us in South and Southeast Asia, the main sources of emissions are industries. And these need clean tech boilers, furnaces, kilns and pollution control devices,” she said, adding that there were limited resources to roll these out. Tussle over clean-tech finance Reena Gupta (centre, with microphone), chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board Reena Gupta, chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board, said there is very little money flowing into developing countries to assist with air pollution. Citing the clean tech projects presented at her panel discussion, Gupta said that while they are excellent, they are “only pilots”. In Punjab in north India, most furnaces in a town known for metal recycling are still being run on coal: “We know the clean technology exists. But it is not viable for the recycling businesses,” she said. Gupta proposed that the international finance agencies develop mechanisms to cover risk for businesses to change to cleaner technology for the first couple of years, after which costs can be borne by the business. In contrast, the World Bank’s Glauber suggested that affected countries should first leverage things like their finance policies, “then investment flows… It’s really about helping commercial finance go into those actual technologies, and you’re basically pushing them over that cost barrier so that they become financially viable.” Citing Nepal’s example, Glauber said that the government made it far cheaper to import electric than fossil fuel vehicles. It is now one of the fastest electric vehicle markets in the world, and has the second highest electric vehicle only to Norway, in terms of electric vehicle penetration. “You play with those [policy] levers, and then investment flows. Obviously, lots to be done in risk-sharing mechanisms that crowd-in private finance for industrial pollution control technology. That’s where the magic needs to happen,” Glauber said. Ann Jeannette Glauber, from the World Bank’s Environment Department (South Asia). ‘Exporting air pollution’ Wealthier nations are also offloading their obsolete and polluting products in the region. “We have had to shut down a few tyre pyrolysis units (in Punjab) that were not deploying proper air pollution control devices. Latest reports have shown that waste tyres are being sent to India from the UK and the Middle East. This is becoming a big source of black carbon, a super pollutant,” she told Health Policy Watch. A study by philanthropic organisation Clean Air Fund (CAF) shows that measures to prevent air pollution are massively underfunded and funding does not reach populations with the highest exposure. Despite the 9:1 benefit-cost advantage, and despite studies that put premature deaths because of air pollution at 8.1 million in 2021, air quality solutions receive 1% of international development funding, according to CAF. This too saw a 20% decrease between 2022 and 2023. Bangkok is turning the tide on air pollution The BAQ was last held in Bangkok 18 years ago. City officials say much has changed since then. Along with the economy and skyline growing, air pollution is a “visible” problem. “On the worst days, parents keep their children indoors, hospitals fill with patients, and the residents lose their trust that the government is doing anything at all,” says PornphromVikitsreth Techapaiboon, chief sustainability officer of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, speaking at the opening session. But there have been measurable improvements in the last year in reducing PM2.5 pollution, he added. The number of “orange and red’ (poor air quality) days has almost halved since 2015 and the PM2.5 concentration fell from nearly 50 micrograms per cubic metre to 37.6, a 22% decrease. These, he says, are “genuine turning points” and that “PM2.5-related patients have decreased in January.” The causes of air pollution are unfavourable geography (Bangkok is in a basin), vehicular, especially diesel pollution, and biomass burning, as shown by their “dust detective” teams with experts from academia and civil society organisations. This has led Bangkok to create an air quality strategy, declaring itself last year to be a pollution control zone. This includes working with upwind provinces where biomass is burnt, leading to more burn-free days. It introduced a ‘green list’ for heavy trucks that are banned from Bangkok unless they can show evidence of recent maintenance. Industrial monitoring is being ramped up. A portable air quality monitor on display at BAQ 2026 in Bangkok Pornphrom says they’re investing in green spaces, not just for aesthetics, but as a public health intervention. PM2.5 levels inside parks are 33-43% lower than in surrounding areas. They message seven-day PM2.5 forecasts and are installing ‘clean air rooms’ in schools. Thailand is emerging as a test case for integrated air quality and climate investment, the conference heard. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) presented a proposed Thailand Integrated Air Quality Investment Program. The proposal outlines a 10-year investment platform aligned with Thailand’s PM2.5 Action Plan and forthcoming Clean Air Act, designed to bring together multiple sectors under a single framework.Priority areas include transport electrification, crop residue management, renewable energy expansion and industrial emission standards. The ADB referenced a programme in Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei in China, where coordinated action across sectors, including fuel switching, clean heating, and industrial upgrading, helped reduce PM2.5 levels by around 40% compared to 2015. At the city level, Bangkok also highlighted the need for sustained partnerships. “Air pollution is a complex challenge that no single city can solve alone. Sustainable air quality improvement requires long-term investment and strong international collaboration,” said Pornthep. Image Credits: UN Thailand, Chetan Bhattacharji. Global Fund Faces $5bn Shortfall as France Slashes Support, EU Delays Pledge 11/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The Global Fund’s eighth replenishment secured $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Battered by a 58% cut from France, a delayed European Union (EU) pledge, and a US pullback, the Global Fund faces a significant shortfall, securing $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target during the 8th replenishment. According to the organization, reaching the full target would have prevented roughly 400 million new AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria infections between 2027 and 2029. Despite this compounding retreat, executive director Peter Sands praised the final tally as a “remarkable result, achieved in a challenging global context.” Significant changes in global health financing have forced a strategic shift, introduced in late 2025, toward the poorest nations bearing the heaviest disease burdens, while placing middle-income countries on accelerated transition timelines toward national self-reliance. “It’s our duty to steer the partnership through this period of uncertainty in a way that protects sustainability, preserves impact, and ensures that the Global Fund continues to deliver for the people and communities we serve,” said Roslyn Morauta, chair of the Global Fund Board, at the 54th Board meeting in February 2026. To manage the Global Fund shortfall, the board approved $10.78 billion in core country allocations for the 2027-2029 implementation period. To maximize the impact of the remaining funds, the board also earmarked $260 million for “catalytic investments” designed to expand access to innovative health products. Executive leadership stressed the urgent need to prioritize these game-changing biomedical innovations, specifically highlighting the continued scale-up of the HIV prevention tool Lenacapavir, alongside new molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis and advanced vector control tools for malaria. French budgetary constraints compound shortfall Driven by domestic fiscal pressure, France’s contribution to the Global Fund plummeted by 58%. The Global Fund shortfall is compounded by a broader shift towards fiscal restraint and budgetary scrutiny across major Western nations. France has traditionally stood as the second-largest contributor to the institution, having regularly increased its support with successive 20% bumps during the previous two replenishment cycles. But, as first reported by franceinfo, the state has now decided to severely slash its international health budget, reducing its financial contribution by 58% for the upcoming cycle, down from the €1.6 billion it previously provided. In a response to a query by Health Policy Watch, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs framed the retreat as a fiscal necessity, citing a mandate to cap the public deficit at 5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2026, demanding significant budgetary efforts across all government sectors. Despite the cut signaling a shift in priorities, the ministry stressed that these temporary financial constraints should not be interpreted as a principled retreat from multilateralism. “The reduction in French investments in global health must be understood in this context, which in no way calls into question our commitment in this area,” stated the Quai d’Orsay in its response. As the pledge is yet to be finalised, the French government insists that global health remains a crucial concern, with the ministry noting that health was recently confirmed as one of France’s “10 priority political objectives” for solidarity investments, specifically aimed at strengthening pandemic resilience and primary health systems. The current intense budgetary pressure stems from the legislative instability gripping President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. After losing its parliamentary majority, the fragmented centrist government only managed to pass the 2026 budget by utilizing a special constitutional tool to bypass a standard vote. EU caught in a budget deadlock The EU Commission remains in a budget deadlock, delaying a multi-year pledge to the Global Fund despite previous announcements. The impact of the Global Fund shortfall is exacerbated by the European Commission’s continued inability to pledge any commitments, a deadlock extending through the February 2026 board meeting. The European bloc missed the formal November 2025 pledging summit, claiming it could not legally secure a multi-year pledge because the replenishment cycle falls between two long-term EU budgets, the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). The current MFF ends 2027, the new framework from 2028-2034 is yet to be formally adopted. According to recent budget hearings, the European Commission formulated a workaround and intended to officially pledge €700 million over a four-year span at the February board meeting. However, the Commission experienced an ongoing delay in formalizing this pledge by the time the board convened, research by Health Policy Watch confirms. This delay comes as the European Parliament warns of severe constraints and a “very limited level of availabilities” as the bloc approaches the final year of its current 2021-2027 long-term budget. EXCLUSIVE: EU to Pledge €700 Million to Global Fund, Less Than Previous Years Even if this severely delayed pledge eventually materializes, stretching it over four years instead of three would represent a significant funding reduction of approximately 26.5% on an annualized basis. Furthermore, the European Commission has confirmed there will be no dedicated “health window” to ringfence budget appropriations in the upcoming long-term budget. Other major donors had already drastically cut their contributions to the Global Fund, fundamentally altering the global health financing landscape. Driven primarily by an inward-looking “America First” political strategy, the US commitment fell from $6 billion in the seventh replenishment to just $4.6 billion in the eighth. Private sector growth cannot counter cuts A health worker in Gyabankrom, Ghana, prepares a malaria vaccine. Despite the shortfall from major donors, the latest replenishment cycle yielded encouraging progress from alternative sources. The global private sector and various philanthropic organizations stepped forward, successfully mobilizing $1.34 billion for the eighth replenishment. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintained its role as the premier private global donor by pledging $912 million. Other corporate actors stepped up to fund vital localized health initiatives, including a £6 million joint financial pledge from GSK and ViiV Healthcare. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) pledged $50 million to accelerate the rollout of innovative tuberculosis diagnostics across affected regions. Goodbye Malaria also reaffirmed its leadership with a $5.5 million contribution to sustain targeted malaria elimination efforts in Eswatini, Mozambique, and South Africa. However, while private funding sits at a record high, it cannot structurally replace the loss of sovereign anchor donors. Even with the $1.34 billion private surge, the overall replenishment total remains more than $5 billion short of the necessary goal to defeat these diseases. African states stepping up Demonstrating a surge in sovereign agency, several African nations have increased or maintained their Global Fund commitments, including South Africa and Nigeria. African states are stepping up, taking a larger financial stake in their health systems. Uganda maintained its previous funding levels with a $3 million pledge, which African diplomats celebrated as a powerful demonstration of the continent’s shared responsibility. This contribution from Uganda is part of a broader, encouraging trend of African implementer-donors actively increasing their domestic financing. South Africa more than doubled its previous commitment to pledge $26.6 million, while Nigeria increased its pledge from $13.2 million to $15 million. African diplomats have continually emphasized the critical importance of increased sovereign investment to accelerate health gains across the continent. As the global health architecture enters this new era of austerity, the structural reliance on domestic African financing will inevitably grow. Despite the current Global Fund shortfall from the West, this emerging sovereign agency offers a resilient pathway toward long-term sustainability and equitable health outcomes. Image Credits: WHO/Fanjan Combrink , Felix Sassmannshausen/Health Policy Watch, European Union. War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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How Public Health Lost the Narrative – and How It Can Win It Back 12/03/2026 Steve Hamill Rock icon Elvis Presley getting his polio vaccination in 1956, as New York City Commissioner of Health Leona Baumgartner (right) held his arm and Assistant Commissioner Harold Fuerst administered the vaccine. His public vaccination massively boosted polio immunisation. Public health ended 2025 in one of its weakest positions in living memory – not because of a surge in disease, but because of a collapse in political, financial, and cultural support. Vaccination policies long considered settled science are being reversed, and industry-backed “junk science” is shaping legislation to derail proven nutrition policies. Even as storied public health entities are being dismantled, the tobacco industry – still responsible for eight million deaths each year – faces little resistance in its cynical PR effort to reposition itself as a champion for health. These are not isolated policy defeats. They are symptoms of a deeper problem: public health has lost its relevance in the public narrative. For decades, harmful industries have poured billions into persuasion, addicting people to sugar, alcohol, and tobacco. Public health, meanwhile, has organized around the assumption that evidence alone can carry policy goals. That may have worked in an era dominated by elite opinion makers driving consensus through limited broadcast media channels and operating with institutional trust. But today’s media landscape—driven by algorithms, influencers, and coordinated narrative warfare – requires something different. The field isn’t losing because the science is weak; it is losing because it has treated communications as a garnish rather than as an engine for impact. While our opponents invest in persuasion as a primary tool, public health has largely disinvested in communication as a core infrastructure. This wasn’t inevitable. Public health’s greatest victories once depended on grassroots education and mass mobilization that shaped the cultural conversation. In 1956, Elvis Presley’s televised polio vaccination helped skyrocket teen uptake from nearly zero to 80%. In the 1980s and ’90s, “Silence=Death” graphics and the art of Keith Haring transformed the HIV/AIDS crisis into a global movement for human rights. Keith Haring’s Ignorance = Fear artwork. These moments proved that narrative power is as essential to public health as any laboratory breakthrough. And they can be again; the field of public health is poised for realignment. Here’s how it can happen: The power of culture and influence Evidence does not “speak” on its own; it requires a deliberate strategy to compete for attention. Industries that profit from harmful products use real-time social listening, test narrative frames the way pharmaceutical companies test molecules, and deploy influencers who reach audiences no government agency can reach. They communicate emotionally and strategically, aided by an unregulated attention economy in which algorithms reward outrage and accelerate falsehoods. Public health must recognize that population health and policy follow culture, not evidence. Today, the main battleground is the “content creator economy.” Remarkable voices, from doctors debunking junk science to creators sharing lived experiences, are proving that health can gain traction there. These talented communicators are the modern heirs to the activist-artists of the past; with support, they could help truth compete at the scale of weaponized disinformation of both industry and grifter economy. Communication as essential infrastructure The path forward requires a fundamental shift in how we define public health “work.” Leaders must decide to fund communication as essential infrastructure, positioned alongside epidemiology, policy development and providing equitable access to high-quality care. This is not about one-off marketing budgets, but about building a core capability that is permanent and professionalized. Financing is often cited as a barrier, but it is political will that is the most important resource. Many countries, cities, and states have already found practical ways to sustain this work, and these could be scaled and more explicitly tied to health. From health foundations and taxes on alcohol and tobacco, to reclaiming public airwaves or redirecting settlement agreements from industry litigation, mechanisms for significant funding exist. The challenge is ensuring these resources are used to strengthen health infrastructure – including public engagement systems needed to address the harms caused by these industries. Ironically, more public visibility and engagement are win/win competencies in the battle to secure resources to better engage the public. Los Angeles County in the US is using some of the people they have helped to overcome health challenges to humanize health policy. What would it look like to treat communication as core infrastructure—on par with labs, data systems, or clinical delivery? Three priorities would define the work ahead: 1. Building professional communication and community engagement capacity within health departments. Modern public health requires full-time professional teams with the budget and authority to run campaigns at scale – comparable to the capacity currently reserved for disease surveillance. Health departments hold a unique strategic advantage: access to the authentic, local stories that humanize policy. Experience in jurisdictions like Los Angeles County shows that when health departments move beyond data dissemination and integrate narrative storytelling, they can successfully reclaim the local conversation from digital noise. 2. Integrating public health with the creator economy. Since many of the most trusted messengers now exist outside of government, public health must develop the infrastructure to collaborate with digital creators while maintaining scientific integrity. Success in this area depends on meeting audiences where they already are. For instance, we see young people leveraging lifestyle themes, using fashion TikToks or travel videos on Instagram to effectively communicate the risks of nicotine to younger audiences who are otherwise unreachable through traditional channels. 3. Shifting from dissemination to community co-creation. Trust is not built through top-down messaging, but through genuine dialogue. The next generation of public health initiatives must move from “targeting” communities to “shaping” work with them. This shift ensures that campaigns are not only culturally grounded but also community-owned, turning a passive audience into active participants in their own health outcomes. Vital Strategies collaborated with the US National Black Harm Reduction Network on a campaign to make naxolone, a spray that can reverse drug overdoses, widely available. Reclaiming the ‘public’ in public health The fundamental truth of 2025 is that for too long public health has retreated into technical, cautious communication – messages optimized for scientific accuracy rather than for the anxieties and daily realities that shape people’s lives. As institutions grew quieter and more inscrutable, a communication vacuum emerged – one that the public naturally filled by turning to more responsive voices, often belonging to industries and ideologues and supercharged by platforms that reward attention and disregard truth. Public health is facing existential challenges, and it may seem far-fetched to include prioritizing communications and public engagement among them. With a desperate shortage of resources, many argue that public health needs to trim back to what is “essential,” rather than think about doing things differently. There are worthy arguments about what public health must focus on delivering – global health security, universal health coverage, stronger lab systems – but none of these efforts can succeed without public approval, attention, and trust. Public health’s next iteration must respond to the new reality that health, social, and policy change are fundamentally rooted in public attention in a way that they never have been before. Reversing this trajectory requires reorientation. Public health must reclaim its identity not just as a scientific enterprise, but as a mobilizing one. It must participate in shaping culture and policy – not as a byproduct of producing evidence, but as a deliberate act. That responsibility falls not just to governments, but to institutions, funders, and organizations committed to protecting health in the 21st century. If we want a healthier future, we must begin with a simple truth: We need to put the public back in public health. Steve Hamill is Vice President of Policy Advocacy and Communication at Vital Strategies Image Credits: Department of Health Collection, New York City, The Haring Foundation, LA County, You Can Save Lives. Policy ‘Magic’ vs Industrial Reality in the Fight for Asia’s Breathable Air 12/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Chula Pop Bus’ is an electrically powered bus servicing students and staff of Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. The 12th Better Air Quality conference opened with a call to treat clean air as vital economic infrastructure, highlighting the large benefit-cost return – but financing clean-tech is a challenge in developing nations. BANGKOK – Short-term impacts of bad air quality don’t just cause high economic costs but also lead to children scoring poorly in tests, warned a World Bank senior official at the opening of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference on Wednesday. The option to invest in cleaner air results in healthier people and stronger economies. Failure to do so means countries will continue to bear the costs of pollution – in hospitals, in lost productivity, and in weakened economies, says Bindu Lohani, chair of Clean Air Asia, BAQ’s main organiser. A significant concern for the BAQ conference is how to increase financing for clean air action. It costs about 0.1% of regional GDP annually to roll out the most effective measures, a World Bank report estimates, while the benefit-cost ratio can be more than 9:1 for countries like Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. Lohani called on governments to treat clean air as core economic infrastructure and set targets to achieve the net-zero climate target by 2050. By 2030, governments should significantly reduce urban particulate pollution, electrify transport systems, expand monitoring, and eliminate the most polluting fuels and practices, such as agricultural and open burning, Lohani proposed. By 2040, air quality should be fully aligned with climate policy and on a path to achieve the 2050 target. The World Bank’s Ann Jeanette Glauber acknowledged that tools such as emissions inventories and enforcement capacity are “essential public goods, but they aren’t sexy”. “There’s no ribbon cutting. Often, they don’t make money, necessarily,” Glauber said, adding that the most financially viable solution is to focus on industry. “For us in South and Southeast Asia, the main sources of emissions are industries. And these need clean tech boilers, furnaces, kilns and pollution control devices,” she said, adding that there were limited resources to roll these out. Tussle over clean-tech finance Reena Gupta (centre, with microphone), chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board Reena Gupta, chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board, said there is very little money flowing into developing countries to assist with air pollution. Citing the clean tech projects presented at her panel discussion, Gupta said that while they are excellent, they are “only pilots”. In Punjab in north India, most furnaces in a town known for metal recycling are still being run on coal: “We know the clean technology exists. But it is not viable for the recycling businesses,” she said. Gupta proposed that the international finance agencies develop mechanisms to cover risk for businesses to change to cleaner technology for the first couple of years, after which costs can be borne by the business. In contrast, the World Bank’s Glauber suggested that affected countries should first leverage things like their finance policies, “then investment flows… It’s really about helping commercial finance go into those actual technologies, and you’re basically pushing them over that cost barrier so that they become financially viable.” Citing Nepal’s example, Glauber said that the government made it far cheaper to import electric than fossil fuel vehicles. It is now one of the fastest electric vehicle markets in the world, and has the second highest electric vehicle only to Norway, in terms of electric vehicle penetration. “You play with those [policy] levers, and then investment flows. Obviously, lots to be done in risk-sharing mechanisms that crowd-in private finance for industrial pollution control technology. That’s where the magic needs to happen,” Glauber said. Ann Jeannette Glauber, from the World Bank’s Environment Department (South Asia). ‘Exporting air pollution’ Wealthier nations are also offloading their obsolete and polluting products in the region. “We have had to shut down a few tyre pyrolysis units (in Punjab) that were not deploying proper air pollution control devices. Latest reports have shown that waste tyres are being sent to India from the UK and the Middle East. This is becoming a big source of black carbon, a super pollutant,” she told Health Policy Watch. A study by philanthropic organisation Clean Air Fund (CAF) shows that measures to prevent air pollution are massively underfunded and funding does not reach populations with the highest exposure. Despite the 9:1 benefit-cost advantage, and despite studies that put premature deaths because of air pollution at 8.1 million in 2021, air quality solutions receive 1% of international development funding, according to CAF. This too saw a 20% decrease between 2022 and 2023. Bangkok is turning the tide on air pollution The BAQ was last held in Bangkok 18 years ago. City officials say much has changed since then. Along with the economy and skyline growing, air pollution is a “visible” problem. “On the worst days, parents keep their children indoors, hospitals fill with patients, and the residents lose their trust that the government is doing anything at all,” says PornphromVikitsreth Techapaiboon, chief sustainability officer of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, speaking at the opening session. But there have been measurable improvements in the last year in reducing PM2.5 pollution, he added. The number of “orange and red’ (poor air quality) days has almost halved since 2015 and the PM2.5 concentration fell from nearly 50 micrograms per cubic metre to 37.6, a 22% decrease. These, he says, are “genuine turning points” and that “PM2.5-related patients have decreased in January.” The causes of air pollution are unfavourable geography (Bangkok is in a basin), vehicular, especially diesel pollution, and biomass burning, as shown by their “dust detective” teams with experts from academia and civil society organisations. This has led Bangkok to create an air quality strategy, declaring itself last year to be a pollution control zone. This includes working with upwind provinces where biomass is burnt, leading to more burn-free days. It introduced a ‘green list’ for heavy trucks that are banned from Bangkok unless they can show evidence of recent maintenance. Industrial monitoring is being ramped up. A portable air quality monitor on display at BAQ 2026 in Bangkok Pornphrom says they’re investing in green spaces, not just for aesthetics, but as a public health intervention. PM2.5 levels inside parks are 33-43% lower than in surrounding areas. They message seven-day PM2.5 forecasts and are installing ‘clean air rooms’ in schools. Thailand is emerging as a test case for integrated air quality and climate investment, the conference heard. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) presented a proposed Thailand Integrated Air Quality Investment Program. The proposal outlines a 10-year investment platform aligned with Thailand’s PM2.5 Action Plan and forthcoming Clean Air Act, designed to bring together multiple sectors under a single framework.Priority areas include transport electrification, crop residue management, renewable energy expansion and industrial emission standards. The ADB referenced a programme in Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei in China, where coordinated action across sectors, including fuel switching, clean heating, and industrial upgrading, helped reduce PM2.5 levels by around 40% compared to 2015. At the city level, Bangkok also highlighted the need for sustained partnerships. “Air pollution is a complex challenge that no single city can solve alone. Sustainable air quality improvement requires long-term investment and strong international collaboration,” said Pornthep. Image Credits: UN Thailand, Chetan Bhattacharji. Global Fund Faces $5bn Shortfall as France Slashes Support, EU Delays Pledge 11/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The Global Fund’s eighth replenishment secured $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Battered by a 58% cut from France, a delayed European Union (EU) pledge, and a US pullback, the Global Fund faces a significant shortfall, securing $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target during the 8th replenishment. According to the organization, reaching the full target would have prevented roughly 400 million new AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria infections between 2027 and 2029. Despite this compounding retreat, executive director Peter Sands praised the final tally as a “remarkable result, achieved in a challenging global context.” Significant changes in global health financing have forced a strategic shift, introduced in late 2025, toward the poorest nations bearing the heaviest disease burdens, while placing middle-income countries on accelerated transition timelines toward national self-reliance. “It’s our duty to steer the partnership through this period of uncertainty in a way that protects sustainability, preserves impact, and ensures that the Global Fund continues to deliver for the people and communities we serve,” said Roslyn Morauta, chair of the Global Fund Board, at the 54th Board meeting in February 2026. To manage the Global Fund shortfall, the board approved $10.78 billion in core country allocations for the 2027-2029 implementation period. To maximize the impact of the remaining funds, the board also earmarked $260 million for “catalytic investments” designed to expand access to innovative health products. Executive leadership stressed the urgent need to prioritize these game-changing biomedical innovations, specifically highlighting the continued scale-up of the HIV prevention tool Lenacapavir, alongside new molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis and advanced vector control tools for malaria. French budgetary constraints compound shortfall Driven by domestic fiscal pressure, France’s contribution to the Global Fund plummeted by 58%. The Global Fund shortfall is compounded by a broader shift towards fiscal restraint and budgetary scrutiny across major Western nations. France has traditionally stood as the second-largest contributor to the institution, having regularly increased its support with successive 20% bumps during the previous two replenishment cycles. But, as first reported by franceinfo, the state has now decided to severely slash its international health budget, reducing its financial contribution by 58% for the upcoming cycle, down from the €1.6 billion it previously provided. In a response to a query by Health Policy Watch, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs framed the retreat as a fiscal necessity, citing a mandate to cap the public deficit at 5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2026, demanding significant budgetary efforts across all government sectors. Despite the cut signaling a shift in priorities, the ministry stressed that these temporary financial constraints should not be interpreted as a principled retreat from multilateralism. “The reduction in French investments in global health must be understood in this context, which in no way calls into question our commitment in this area,” stated the Quai d’Orsay in its response. As the pledge is yet to be finalised, the French government insists that global health remains a crucial concern, with the ministry noting that health was recently confirmed as one of France’s “10 priority political objectives” for solidarity investments, specifically aimed at strengthening pandemic resilience and primary health systems. The current intense budgetary pressure stems from the legislative instability gripping President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. After losing its parliamentary majority, the fragmented centrist government only managed to pass the 2026 budget by utilizing a special constitutional tool to bypass a standard vote. EU caught in a budget deadlock The EU Commission remains in a budget deadlock, delaying a multi-year pledge to the Global Fund despite previous announcements. The impact of the Global Fund shortfall is exacerbated by the European Commission’s continued inability to pledge any commitments, a deadlock extending through the February 2026 board meeting. The European bloc missed the formal November 2025 pledging summit, claiming it could not legally secure a multi-year pledge because the replenishment cycle falls between two long-term EU budgets, the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). The current MFF ends 2027, the new framework from 2028-2034 is yet to be formally adopted. According to recent budget hearings, the European Commission formulated a workaround and intended to officially pledge €700 million over a four-year span at the February board meeting. However, the Commission experienced an ongoing delay in formalizing this pledge by the time the board convened, research by Health Policy Watch confirms. This delay comes as the European Parliament warns of severe constraints and a “very limited level of availabilities” as the bloc approaches the final year of its current 2021-2027 long-term budget. EXCLUSIVE: EU to Pledge €700 Million to Global Fund, Less Than Previous Years Even if this severely delayed pledge eventually materializes, stretching it over four years instead of three would represent a significant funding reduction of approximately 26.5% on an annualized basis. Furthermore, the European Commission has confirmed there will be no dedicated “health window” to ringfence budget appropriations in the upcoming long-term budget. Other major donors had already drastically cut their contributions to the Global Fund, fundamentally altering the global health financing landscape. Driven primarily by an inward-looking “America First” political strategy, the US commitment fell from $6 billion in the seventh replenishment to just $4.6 billion in the eighth. Private sector growth cannot counter cuts A health worker in Gyabankrom, Ghana, prepares a malaria vaccine. Despite the shortfall from major donors, the latest replenishment cycle yielded encouraging progress from alternative sources. The global private sector and various philanthropic organizations stepped forward, successfully mobilizing $1.34 billion for the eighth replenishment. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintained its role as the premier private global donor by pledging $912 million. Other corporate actors stepped up to fund vital localized health initiatives, including a £6 million joint financial pledge from GSK and ViiV Healthcare. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) pledged $50 million to accelerate the rollout of innovative tuberculosis diagnostics across affected regions. Goodbye Malaria also reaffirmed its leadership with a $5.5 million contribution to sustain targeted malaria elimination efforts in Eswatini, Mozambique, and South Africa. However, while private funding sits at a record high, it cannot structurally replace the loss of sovereign anchor donors. Even with the $1.34 billion private surge, the overall replenishment total remains more than $5 billion short of the necessary goal to defeat these diseases. African states stepping up Demonstrating a surge in sovereign agency, several African nations have increased or maintained their Global Fund commitments, including South Africa and Nigeria. African states are stepping up, taking a larger financial stake in their health systems. Uganda maintained its previous funding levels with a $3 million pledge, which African diplomats celebrated as a powerful demonstration of the continent’s shared responsibility. This contribution from Uganda is part of a broader, encouraging trend of African implementer-donors actively increasing their domestic financing. South Africa more than doubled its previous commitment to pledge $26.6 million, while Nigeria increased its pledge from $13.2 million to $15 million. African diplomats have continually emphasized the critical importance of increased sovereign investment to accelerate health gains across the continent. As the global health architecture enters this new era of austerity, the structural reliance on domestic African financing will inevitably grow. Despite the current Global Fund shortfall from the West, this emerging sovereign agency offers a resilient pathway toward long-term sustainability and equitable health outcomes. Image Credits: WHO/Fanjan Combrink , Felix Sassmannshausen/Health Policy Watch, European Union. War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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Policy ‘Magic’ vs Industrial Reality in the Fight for Asia’s Breathable Air 12/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Chula Pop Bus’ is an electrically powered bus servicing students and staff of Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. The 12th Better Air Quality conference opened with a call to treat clean air as vital economic infrastructure, highlighting the large benefit-cost return – but financing clean-tech is a challenge in developing nations. BANGKOK – Short-term impacts of bad air quality don’t just cause high economic costs but also lead to children scoring poorly in tests, warned a World Bank senior official at the opening of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference on Wednesday. The option to invest in cleaner air results in healthier people and stronger economies. Failure to do so means countries will continue to bear the costs of pollution – in hospitals, in lost productivity, and in weakened economies, says Bindu Lohani, chair of Clean Air Asia, BAQ’s main organiser. A significant concern for the BAQ conference is how to increase financing for clean air action. It costs about 0.1% of regional GDP annually to roll out the most effective measures, a World Bank report estimates, while the benefit-cost ratio can be more than 9:1 for countries like Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. Lohani called on governments to treat clean air as core economic infrastructure and set targets to achieve the net-zero climate target by 2050. By 2030, governments should significantly reduce urban particulate pollution, electrify transport systems, expand monitoring, and eliminate the most polluting fuels and practices, such as agricultural and open burning, Lohani proposed. By 2040, air quality should be fully aligned with climate policy and on a path to achieve the 2050 target. The World Bank’s Ann Jeanette Glauber acknowledged that tools such as emissions inventories and enforcement capacity are “essential public goods, but they aren’t sexy”. “There’s no ribbon cutting. Often, they don’t make money, necessarily,” Glauber said, adding that the most financially viable solution is to focus on industry. “For us in South and Southeast Asia, the main sources of emissions are industries. And these need clean tech boilers, furnaces, kilns and pollution control devices,” she said, adding that there were limited resources to roll these out. Tussle over clean-tech finance Reena Gupta (centre, with microphone), chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board Reena Gupta, chairperson of the Punjab Pollution Control Board, said there is very little money flowing into developing countries to assist with air pollution. Citing the clean tech projects presented at her panel discussion, Gupta said that while they are excellent, they are “only pilots”. In Punjab in north India, most furnaces in a town known for metal recycling are still being run on coal: “We know the clean technology exists. But it is not viable for the recycling businesses,” she said. Gupta proposed that the international finance agencies develop mechanisms to cover risk for businesses to change to cleaner technology for the first couple of years, after which costs can be borne by the business. In contrast, the World Bank’s Glauber suggested that affected countries should first leverage things like their finance policies, “then investment flows… It’s really about helping commercial finance go into those actual technologies, and you’re basically pushing them over that cost barrier so that they become financially viable.” Citing Nepal’s example, Glauber said that the government made it far cheaper to import electric than fossil fuel vehicles. It is now one of the fastest electric vehicle markets in the world, and has the second highest electric vehicle only to Norway, in terms of electric vehicle penetration. “You play with those [policy] levers, and then investment flows. Obviously, lots to be done in risk-sharing mechanisms that crowd-in private finance for industrial pollution control technology. That’s where the magic needs to happen,” Glauber said. Ann Jeannette Glauber, from the World Bank’s Environment Department (South Asia). ‘Exporting air pollution’ Wealthier nations are also offloading their obsolete and polluting products in the region. “We have had to shut down a few tyre pyrolysis units (in Punjab) that were not deploying proper air pollution control devices. Latest reports have shown that waste tyres are being sent to India from the UK and the Middle East. This is becoming a big source of black carbon, a super pollutant,” she told Health Policy Watch. A study by philanthropic organisation Clean Air Fund (CAF) shows that measures to prevent air pollution are massively underfunded and funding does not reach populations with the highest exposure. Despite the 9:1 benefit-cost advantage, and despite studies that put premature deaths because of air pollution at 8.1 million in 2021, air quality solutions receive 1% of international development funding, according to CAF. This too saw a 20% decrease between 2022 and 2023. Bangkok is turning the tide on air pollution The BAQ was last held in Bangkok 18 years ago. City officials say much has changed since then. Along with the economy and skyline growing, air pollution is a “visible” problem. “On the worst days, parents keep their children indoors, hospitals fill with patients, and the residents lose their trust that the government is doing anything at all,” says PornphromVikitsreth Techapaiboon, chief sustainability officer of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, speaking at the opening session. But there have been measurable improvements in the last year in reducing PM2.5 pollution, he added. The number of “orange and red’ (poor air quality) days has almost halved since 2015 and the PM2.5 concentration fell from nearly 50 micrograms per cubic metre to 37.6, a 22% decrease. These, he says, are “genuine turning points” and that “PM2.5-related patients have decreased in January.” The causes of air pollution are unfavourable geography (Bangkok is in a basin), vehicular, especially diesel pollution, and biomass burning, as shown by their “dust detective” teams with experts from academia and civil society organisations. This has led Bangkok to create an air quality strategy, declaring itself last year to be a pollution control zone. This includes working with upwind provinces where biomass is burnt, leading to more burn-free days. It introduced a ‘green list’ for heavy trucks that are banned from Bangkok unless they can show evidence of recent maintenance. Industrial monitoring is being ramped up. A portable air quality monitor on display at BAQ 2026 in Bangkok Pornphrom says they’re investing in green spaces, not just for aesthetics, but as a public health intervention. PM2.5 levels inside parks are 33-43% lower than in surrounding areas. They message seven-day PM2.5 forecasts and are installing ‘clean air rooms’ in schools. Thailand is emerging as a test case for integrated air quality and climate investment, the conference heard. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) presented a proposed Thailand Integrated Air Quality Investment Program. The proposal outlines a 10-year investment platform aligned with Thailand’s PM2.5 Action Plan and forthcoming Clean Air Act, designed to bring together multiple sectors under a single framework.Priority areas include transport electrification, crop residue management, renewable energy expansion and industrial emission standards. The ADB referenced a programme in Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei in China, where coordinated action across sectors, including fuel switching, clean heating, and industrial upgrading, helped reduce PM2.5 levels by around 40% compared to 2015. At the city level, Bangkok also highlighted the need for sustained partnerships. “Air pollution is a complex challenge that no single city can solve alone. Sustainable air quality improvement requires long-term investment and strong international collaboration,” said Pornthep. Image Credits: UN Thailand, Chetan Bhattacharji. Global Fund Faces $5bn Shortfall as France Slashes Support, EU Delays Pledge 11/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The Global Fund’s eighth replenishment secured $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Battered by a 58% cut from France, a delayed European Union (EU) pledge, and a US pullback, the Global Fund faces a significant shortfall, securing $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target during the 8th replenishment. According to the organization, reaching the full target would have prevented roughly 400 million new AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria infections between 2027 and 2029. Despite this compounding retreat, executive director Peter Sands praised the final tally as a “remarkable result, achieved in a challenging global context.” Significant changes in global health financing have forced a strategic shift, introduced in late 2025, toward the poorest nations bearing the heaviest disease burdens, while placing middle-income countries on accelerated transition timelines toward national self-reliance. “It’s our duty to steer the partnership through this period of uncertainty in a way that protects sustainability, preserves impact, and ensures that the Global Fund continues to deliver for the people and communities we serve,” said Roslyn Morauta, chair of the Global Fund Board, at the 54th Board meeting in February 2026. To manage the Global Fund shortfall, the board approved $10.78 billion in core country allocations for the 2027-2029 implementation period. To maximize the impact of the remaining funds, the board also earmarked $260 million for “catalytic investments” designed to expand access to innovative health products. Executive leadership stressed the urgent need to prioritize these game-changing biomedical innovations, specifically highlighting the continued scale-up of the HIV prevention tool Lenacapavir, alongside new molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis and advanced vector control tools for malaria. French budgetary constraints compound shortfall Driven by domestic fiscal pressure, France’s contribution to the Global Fund plummeted by 58%. The Global Fund shortfall is compounded by a broader shift towards fiscal restraint and budgetary scrutiny across major Western nations. France has traditionally stood as the second-largest contributor to the institution, having regularly increased its support with successive 20% bumps during the previous two replenishment cycles. But, as first reported by franceinfo, the state has now decided to severely slash its international health budget, reducing its financial contribution by 58% for the upcoming cycle, down from the €1.6 billion it previously provided. In a response to a query by Health Policy Watch, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs framed the retreat as a fiscal necessity, citing a mandate to cap the public deficit at 5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2026, demanding significant budgetary efforts across all government sectors. Despite the cut signaling a shift in priorities, the ministry stressed that these temporary financial constraints should not be interpreted as a principled retreat from multilateralism. “The reduction in French investments in global health must be understood in this context, which in no way calls into question our commitment in this area,” stated the Quai d’Orsay in its response. As the pledge is yet to be finalised, the French government insists that global health remains a crucial concern, with the ministry noting that health was recently confirmed as one of France’s “10 priority political objectives” for solidarity investments, specifically aimed at strengthening pandemic resilience and primary health systems. The current intense budgetary pressure stems from the legislative instability gripping President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. After losing its parliamentary majority, the fragmented centrist government only managed to pass the 2026 budget by utilizing a special constitutional tool to bypass a standard vote. EU caught in a budget deadlock The EU Commission remains in a budget deadlock, delaying a multi-year pledge to the Global Fund despite previous announcements. The impact of the Global Fund shortfall is exacerbated by the European Commission’s continued inability to pledge any commitments, a deadlock extending through the February 2026 board meeting. The European bloc missed the formal November 2025 pledging summit, claiming it could not legally secure a multi-year pledge because the replenishment cycle falls between two long-term EU budgets, the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). The current MFF ends 2027, the new framework from 2028-2034 is yet to be formally adopted. According to recent budget hearings, the European Commission formulated a workaround and intended to officially pledge €700 million over a four-year span at the February board meeting. However, the Commission experienced an ongoing delay in formalizing this pledge by the time the board convened, research by Health Policy Watch confirms. This delay comes as the European Parliament warns of severe constraints and a “very limited level of availabilities” as the bloc approaches the final year of its current 2021-2027 long-term budget. EXCLUSIVE: EU to Pledge €700 Million to Global Fund, Less Than Previous Years Even if this severely delayed pledge eventually materializes, stretching it over four years instead of three would represent a significant funding reduction of approximately 26.5% on an annualized basis. Furthermore, the European Commission has confirmed there will be no dedicated “health window” to ringfence budget appropriations in the upcoming long-term budget. Other major donors had already drastically cut their contributions to the Global Fund, fundamentally altering the global health financing landscape. Driven primarily by an inward-looking “America First” political strategy, the US commitment fell from $6 billion in the seventh replenishment to just $4.6 billion in the eighth. Private sector growth cannot counter cuts A health worker in Gyabankrom, Ghana, prepares a malaria vaccine. Despite the shortfall from major donors, the latest replenishment cycle yielded encouraging progress from alternative sources. The global private sector and various philanthropic organizations stepped forward, successfully mobilizing $1.34 billion for the eighth replenishment. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintained its role as the premier private global donor by pledging $912 million. Other corporate actors stepped up to fund vital localized health initiatives, including a £6 million joint financial pledge from GSK and ViiV Healthcare. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) pledged $50 million to accelerate the rollout of innovative tuberculosis diagnostics across affected regions. Goodbye Malaria also reaffirmed its leadership with a $5.5 million contribution to sustain targeted malaria elimination efforts in Eswatini, Mozambique, and South Africa. However, while private funding sits at a record high, it cannot structurally replace the loss of sovereign anchor donors. Even with the $1.34 billion private surge, the overall replenishment total remains more than $5 billion short of the necessary goal to defeat these diseases. African states stepping up Demonstrating a surge in sovereign agency, several African nations have increased or maintained their Global Fund commitments, including South Africa and Nigeria. African states are stepping up, taking a larger financial stake in their health systems. Uganda maintained its previous funding levels with a $3 million pledge, which African diplomats celebrated as a powerful demonstration of the continent’s shared responsibility. This contribution from Uganda is part of a broader, encouraging trend of African implementer-donors actively increasing their domestic financing. South Africa more than doubled its previous commitment to pledge $26.6 million, while Nigeria increased its pledge from $13.2 million to $15 million. African diplomats have continually emphasized the critical importance of increased sovereign investment to accelerate health gains across the continent. As the global health architecture enters this new era of austerity, the structural reliance on domestic African financing will inevitably grow. Despite the current Global Fund shortfall from the West, this emerging sovereign agency offers a resilient pathway toward long-term sustainability and equitable health outcomes. Image Credits: WHO/Fanjan Combrink , Felix Sassmannshausen/Health Policy Watch, European Union. War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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Global Fund Faces $5bn Shortfall as France Slashes Support, EU Delays Pledge 11/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The Global Fund’s eighth replenishment secured $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Battered by a 58% cut from France, a delayed European Union (EU) pledge, and a US pullback, the Global Fund faces a significant shortfall, securing $12.64 billion against its $18 billion target during the 8th replenishment. According to the organization, reaching the full target would have prevented roughly 400 million new AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria infections between 2027 and 2029. Despite this compounding retreat, executive director Peter Sands praised the final tally as a “remarkable result, achieved in a challenging global context.” Significant changes in global health financing have forced a strategic shift, introduced in late 2025, toward the poorest nations bearing the heaviest disease burdens, while placing middle-income countries on accelerated transition timelines toward national self-reliance. “It’s our duty to steer the partnership through this period of uncertainty in a way that protects sustainability, preserves impact, and ensures that the Global Fund continues to deliver for the people and communities we serve,” said Roslyn Morauta, chair of the Global Fund Board, at the 54th Board meeting in February 2026. To manage the Global Fund shortfall, the board approved $10.78 billion in core country allocations for the 2027-2029 implementation period. To maximize the impact of the remaining funds, the board also earmarked $260 million for “catalytic investments” designed to expand access to innovative health products. Executive leadership stressed the urgent need to prioritize these game-changing biomedical innovations, specifically highlighting the continued scale-up of the HIV prevention tool Lenacapavir, alongside new molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis and advanced vector control tools for malaria. French budgetary constraints compound shortfall Driven by domestic fiscal pressure, France’s contribution to the Global Fund plummeted by 58%. The Global Fund shortfall is compounded by a broader shift towards fiscal restraint and budgetary scrutiny across major Western nations. France has traditionally stood as the second-largest contributor to the institution, having regularly increased its support with successive 20% bumps during the previous two replenishment cycles. But, as first reported by franceinfo, the state has now decided to severely slash its international health budget, reducing its financial contribution by 58% for the upcoming cycle, down from the €1.6 billion it previously provided. In a response to a query by Health Policy Watch, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs framed the retreat as a fiscal necessity, citing a mandate to cap the public deficit at 5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2026, demanding significant budgetary efforts across all government sectors. Despite the cut signaling a shift in priorities, the ministry stressed that these temporary financial constraints should not be interpreted as a principled retreat from multilateralism. “The reduction in French investments in global health must be understood in this context, which in no way calls into question our commitment in this area,” stated the Quai d’Orsay in its response. As the pledge is yet to be finalised, the French government insists that global health remains a crucial concern, with the ministry noting that health was recently confirmed as one of France’s “10 priority political objectives” for solidarity investments, specifically aimed at strengthening pandemic resilience and primary health systems. The current intense budgetary pressure stems from the legislative instability gripping President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. After losing its parliamentary majority, the fragmented centrist government only managed to pass the 2026 budget by utilizing a special constitutional tool to bypass a standard vote. EU caught in a budget deadlock The EU Commission remains in a budget deadlock, delaying a multi-year pledge to the Global Fund despite previous announcements. The impact of the Global Fund shortfall is exacerbated by the European Commission’s continued inability to pledge any commitments, a deadlock extending through the February 2026 board meeting. The European bloc missed the formal November 2025 pledging summit, claiming it could not legally secure a multi-year pledge because the replenishment cycle falls between two long-term EU budgets, the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). The current MFF ends 2027, the new framework from 2028-2034 is yet to be formally adopted. According to recent budget hearings, the European Commission formulated a workaround and intended to officially pledge €700 million over a four-year span at the February board meeting. However, the Commission experienced an ongoing delay in formalizing this pledge by the time the board convened, research by Health Policy Watch confirms. This delay comes as the European Parliament warns of severe constraints and a “very limited level of availabilities” as the bloc approaches the final year of its current 2021-2027 long-term budget. EXCLUSIVE: EU to Pledge €700 Million to Global Fund, Less Than Previous Years Even if this severely delayed pledge eventually materializes, stretching it over four years instead of three would represent a significant funding reduction of approximately 26.5% on an annualized basis. Furthermore, the European Commission has confirmed there will be no dedicated “health window” to ringfence budget appropriations in the upcoming long-term budget. Other major donors had already drastically cut their contributions to the Global Fund, fundamentally altering the global health financing landscape. Driven primarily by an inward-looking “America First” political strategy, the US commitment fell from $6 billion in the seventh replenishment to just $4.6 billion in the eighth. Private sector growth cannot counter cuts A health worker in Gyabankrom, Ghana, prepares a malaria vaccine. Despite the shortfall from major donors, the latest replenishment cycle yielded encouraging progress from alternative sources. The global private sector and various philanthropic organizations stepped forward, successfully mobilizing $1.34 billion for the eighth replenishment. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintained its role as the premier private global donor by pledging $912 million. Other corporate actors stepped up to fund vital localized health initiatives, including a £6 million joint financial pledge from GSK and ViiV Healthcare. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) pledged $50 million to accelerate the rollout of innovative tuberculosis diagnostics across affected regions. Goodbye Malaria also reaffirmed its leadership with a $5.5 million contribution to sustain targeted malaria elimination efforts in Eswatini, Mozambique, and South Africa. However, while private funding sits at a record high, it cannot structurally replace the loss of sovereign anchor donors. Even with the $1.34 billion private surge, the overall replenishment total remains more than $5 billion short of the necessary goal to defeat these diseases. African states stepping up Demonstrating a surge in sovereign agency, several African nations have increased or maintained their Global Fund commitments, including South Africa and Nigeria. African states are stepping up, taking a larger financial stake in their health systems. Uganda maintained its previous funding levels with a $3 million pledge, which African diplomats celebrated as a powerful demonstration of the continent’s shared responsibility. This contribution from Uganda is part of a broader, encouraging trend of African implementer-donors actively increasing their domestic financing. South Africa more than doubled its previous commitment to pledge $26.6 million, while Nigeria increased its pledge from $13.2 million to $15 million. African diplomats have continually emphasized the critical importance of increased sovereign investment to accelerate health gains across the continent. As the global health architecture enters this new era of austerity, the structural reliance on domestic African financing will inevitably grow. Despite the current Global Fund shortfall from the West, this emerging sovereign agency offers a resilient pathway toward long-term sustainability and equitable health outcomes. Image Credits: WHO/Fanjan Combrink , Felix Sassmannshausen/Health Policy Watch, European Union. War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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War and Herbicide: Renewed Focus on Trump’s Support for ‘Elemental Phosphorus’ 11/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan Thousands of people claim that exposure to Roundup has given them cancer. US President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on “elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicide” is facing renewed scrutiny for potentially shielding a controversial weapon of war. The order promotes the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate. Elemental phosphorus is the raw material used in white phosphorus weapons, which cause severe burns and tissue damage, and their use is controlled under international humanitarian law. Glyphosate is the key ingredient of Roundup, the most commonly used herbicide by US agriculture. Back in 2015, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans”. Under the order, the US Secretary of Agriculture is directed to ensure that no government “order, rule, or regulation” threatens the “financial viability of domestic producers of either substance”. Crucially, it also grants those producers immunity under the Defense Production Act — a provision critics say could insulate manufacturers from legal accountability. Initial reaction to the order focused on Trump’s support for glyphosate, drawing condemnation from some of the leaders of Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), the lobby group that supports US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. Controversially, however, Kennedy backed Trump’s order, claiming that it safeguards America’s national security. “Donald Trump’s Executive Order puts America first where it matters most — our defense readiness and our food supply. We must safeguard America’s national security first, because all of our priorities depend on it,” Kennedy said in a statement to CNBC. The executive order also declares that “elemental phosphorus is a scarce material that is critical to national defense and security”, and the New York Times reports that Trump’s decision “was significantly influenced by “concerns about the availability of phosphorus for defense”. Monsanto supplies US military In response to the executive order, Roundup’s manufacturer, Monsanto, said that it “will comply with this order to produce glyphosate and elemental phosphorus.” Monsanto is the only US company that produces white phosphorus. It supplies it to the ICL Group (formerly Israel Chemicals Ltd) which sells it to the US military, where it is processed into weapons, according to Corruption Tracker, a US group that tracks corruption in the arms industry. Last month, Monsanto, which was bought by the German company Bayer in 2018, reached a provisional $7.25 billion settlement with US law firms representing clients who claim that exposure to Roundup caused them to develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The agreement covers plaintiffs exposed to Roundup before 17 February and currently have a medical diagnosis of NHL, or who receive a medical diagnosis within 16 years following the final approval of the agreement, according to an announcement from Bayer, which bought Monsanto in 2018. The executive order may provide the company with protection against other legal challenges. ‘Deep, severe burns’ White phosphorus, which “ignites spontaneously in air at temperatures above 30 °C”, is extremely hard to extinguish and can cause “deep and severe burns”, according to the WHO. “White phosphorus is harmful to humans by all routes of exposure,” according to the WHO. It can cause “severe deep burns” as it is “highly soluble in lipids” and can penetrate skin tissue. Its smoke harms people’s eyes and respiratory tract as phosphorus oxides dissolve in moisture to form phosphoric acids. Exposure can also cause “cardiovascular effects and collapse, as well as renal and hepatic damage and depressed consciousness and coma,” says the WHO. White phosphorus in Lebanon White phosphorus being fired into Lebanon by Israel in 2024. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported last week that Israel had fired white phosphorus (a type of elemental phosphorus) bombs over a residential area of Yohmor, a town in southern Lebanon. HRW has previously reported Israel’s use of white phosphorus in at least 17 municipalities in Lebanon between October 2023 and May 2024. HRW has previously documented Israel’s use of white phosphorus in Gaza in 2008-2009. In October 2023, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab verified that Israel’s attacks on Gaza used M825 and M825A1 projectiles labelled with the US Department of Defense (now Department of War) Identification Codes for white phosphorus-based rounds. White phosphorus is classified as an “incendiary weapon”, not a chemical weapon as military forces claim that they use it as a smokescreen. The use of white phosphorus is governed by Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), which prohibits the use of airdropped incendiary weapons in “concentrations of civilians”. Israel is not a signatory to the convention. Bayer’s influence in the Trump administration A recent investigation by US Right to Know exposed extensive links between the Trump administration and Bayer, which owns Monsanto. It linked 22 key Trump administration staff members to Bayer’s lobbying or legal network. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and US Attorney General Pam Bondi have both been partners in Ballard Partners, the lobbying firm that represents Bayer. Ballard Partners founder Brian Ballard “raised more than $50 million for Trump’s 2024 campaign, and served on the 2024 inaugural and transition finance committees.” “More than 30 senior officials at lobby firms retained by Bayer have direct ties to Trump, having worked in one or both of his administrations or political campaigns,” according to Right to Know. Image Credits: Aljazeera, Pesticide Action Network. Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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Global Health Infrastructure is Changing. Why Getting it Right Matters 11/03/2026 Marcus Low Staff from the now-defunct US Agency for International Development (USAID) offload emergency supplies. Funding cuts over the past year have created a crisis for multilateral health institutions. Which institutions emerge from this crisis, and in what form, will have real consequences for the health of people in countries like South Africa. In recent weeks, there has been a glut of articles from global health big-hitters, all concerned with how multilateral health institutions should, or should not be redesigned. These include articles from Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of UNITAID, Sania Nishtar, CEO of GAVI, and one co-authored by, among others, Anders Nordström, a former acting Director-General of the WHO, Helen Clark, a former New Zealand Prime Minister, and Peter Piot, the driving force behind UNAIDS from the mid-90s to 2008. The immediate cause of all this debate is the stark reality that funding for multilateral health institutions have been cut dramatically in the last year, mainly, but not exclusively, due to the United States’ retreat from such international forums in favour of bilateral agreements. Even before the funding cuts, the financial outlook at entities like the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS was bleak. Over the last year, it has tipped over into outright crisis. The WHO has already undertaken drastic organisational restructuring. Last year, a UN document raised the possibility of “sunsetting” UNAIDS by the end of 2026. It is likely that we will see several more organisations shrinking or disappearing altogether in the coming years. Why does this matter? The multilateral health institutions we’ve had in recent decades have not been perfect. They were often overly politicised, fraught with power imbalances, and not always capable of responding quickly and effectively to health emergencies. But even so, it is unequivocally true that when it comes to healthcare, multilateralism has yielded many tangible benefits that are helping keep people alive. In a world where every country stands alone, these benefits will simply fall away. There are many examples of such benefits. The WHO’s treatment guidelines for diseases like HIV and TB are public goods that are invaluable in many countries. In South Africa, they were particularly important as an antidote to the crackpot science that flourished in the period of state-sponsored AIDS denialism. The sharing of genomics data between countries was critically important at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over an even longer period, the sharing of data on influenza strains has enabled the rational selection of vaccine components for each hemisphere each year. Medicine regulators in different countries increasingly share some of their work in order to speed up their processes and avoid duplication. Lenacapavir, packaged as Sunlenca in the US, is being rolled out in South Africa and other countries with significant HIV burdens. This year, a new HIV prevention injection containing the ARV lenacapavir is being rolled out in South Africa and several other countries, largely with the help of the Global Fund, another international entity. A stable supply of low-cost lenacapavir should be available in around a year or two from now, due to market-shaping work done by UNITAID, the Gates Foundation, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Wits RHI. Such market-shaping often involves committing ahead of time to purchase certain volumes of a product to incentivise manufacturers to invest in production capacity, thus kick-starting the market for the product. Then there is the recent history of how rapidly a new antiretroviral medicine called dolutegravir was rolled out in South Africa from 2019. Today over five million people here are taking it. The Geneva-based Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) negotiated licenses that allowed generic competition to start years earlier than would otherwise have been the case. That enabled the low prices and supply security that has facilitated the massive uptake of dolutegravir here and in dozens of other countries. It is clearly in the interest of countries like South Africa to help keep mechanisms like these going. But to reduce the value of these institutions to purely the technical would miss the essence of what animates them in the first place. The reality is that multilateral health institutions have often been at their most effective when people were driven by the need to address urgent health needs, as in the early days of UNAIDS, for example. The belief that people’s health matters, no matter who they are, or where they live – essentially a belief in human rights – can make the difference between an ineffectual bureaucracy and a vital health movement. Our current crisis is not only one of technical capacity, but also one where the animating power of human rights-based thinking is being challenged. Charles Gore, executive director of Medicines Patent Pool, which has successfully negotiated licenses that allowed the production of several cheaper generic medicines. How should we think about redesigning global health? There are some tensions between fighting to keep what we currently have and embracing big reforms. For example, on the one hand, given the aid cuts of the last year, people have good reason to be concerned about the potential closure of UNAIDS being a precursor to the further unravelling of the global HIV response. On the other hand, there are legitimate questions as to whether UNAIDS is still fit for purpose, given how the HIV epidemic has changed over the last three decades. One of the most useful contributions on how to think about all this comes from Nordström and his co-authors. They outline four key paradigm shifts that help bring the current moment into focus. Their paper is worth reading in full for the nuances, but here is a brief paraphrasing of the four paradigm shifts: The first shift is about recognising the fundamental changes underway in the global burden of disease and in demography. In short, while the key threats in the last three decades were the infectious diseases malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV, they are increasingly being overtaken by non-communicable diseases (like diabetes and hypertension) and mental health disorders. This shift is not yet reflected in the architecture of multilateral health institutions. The second shift relates to the recentring of power from Geneva in Switzerland and New York and Washington in the USA to countries and regions, giving rise to an increasingly multipolar world. “This shift does not imply that multilateral cooperation is obsolete,” write the authors, “however, it requires a clarification of which future functions should be performed at the global level, and which should be performed by national and regional bodies.” The third shift refers to the growing push to modernise global health institutions. The authors write: “Leaders from low-income and middle-income countries have repeatedly critiqued the dearth of systemic support, the inefficiencies of vertical initiatives, and the resource-intensive bureaucratic processes that accompany them”. Considering these external and internal pressures, they argue that there is a need to move from a complex and competitive system to a simpler, needs-based, and agile system. The fourth shift is linked to the declining relative importance of development assistance, coupled with countries’ rising commitments to increase domestic financing for health. Although some international support will remain essential for low-income countries and humanitarian responses, the authors argue that domestic resources must be the engine of a new ecosystem and ways of working together. Power in global health needs to be decentralised from the UN hubs in Geneva and New York and located in regions and countries, argue Anders Nordström and co-authors. All of these shifts are now occurring within the broader geopolitical context of what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently described as a “rupture in the world order”. He stressed that the great powers have turned their backs on the rules-based world order and have “begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited”. This shift can already be seen in the US’s pivot from multilateralism to bilateral health agreements. As Carney put it: “The multilateral institutions on which the middle powers have relied – the WTO, the UN, the COP – the very architecture of collective problem solving, are under threat.” He argues that middle-powers like Canada, and I’d argue South Africa too, should aspire to be part of this group, and chart a way forward where they are not overly reliant on super-powers like the US and China. Avoiding such an over-reliance is of course also an obvious lesson to take from the US’s abrupt cuts to health aid last year. Maybe a first harsh reality to come to terms with, then is that the rupture that is taking place in global geopolitics is also occurring in the world of global health. To think that we can go back to the way the WHO or UNAIDS were 20 years ago is wishful thinking. The “rupture” might take time to propagate, but it will extend all the way. What is to be done? Carney also makes the point that the rules-based order wasn’t in fact working as well for everyone as we liked to pretend. To a lesser extent, something similar could be said for multilateralism in health. Getting things done was often hard, the politics was often tricky, and when it came to the crunch, say on something like patents on medicines, the US and Europe almost always held sway. As outlined above, countries like South Africa benefited in very concrete ways from multi-lateral forums, but somehow those benefits were never widely appreciated. Ultimately, it is telling that so many national governments have failed to put up the money the WHO requires to do its work – even before the current US withdrawal. Maybe then, to make a reset of multilateral health institutions a success, will require that governments reassess and newly appreciate why it is that we need multilateral health institutions in the first place. This will require a thorough and honest assessment of what we have gained from these institutions in recent decades. Things like market-shaping, patent pooling, pooled procurement, sharing of genomics and other data, regulatory harmonisation, guideline development, research cooperation, and multilateral fund-raising have all been important and will continue to be so. We must make sure that, whatever emerges in the next few years, we have multilateral mechanisms that can deliver in all these areas. But we will have to accept that those entities might look quite different from what we’ve come to know in recent decades. There will certainly be areas in which we still need global institutions like the WHO, but for some issues, we might get more done by working with coalitions of the willing, or collaborating at a regional level – as we’re already seeing with the African Medicines Agency (although South Africa rather inexplicably hasn’t yet ratified the related treaty). The reality is that apart from governments not being willing to spend more on health at the moment, the enabling geopolitical substructure that we’ve been relying on for decades has given way. In many respects, this has been a disaster for our common good, but it is also an opportunity to craft new and more fit-for-purpose multilateral health institutions that are animated by a shared commitment to human rights. This is an opportunity that countries like South Africa must grasp. As Carney put it: “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.” *Low is editor of Spotlight. This article was co-published with Spotlight, a South African public health magazine that aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues. The article mentions The Gates Foundation, which provides some funding to Spotlight, but is editorially independent. Image Credits: US Mission in Geneva / Eric Bridiers via Flickr, USAID Press Office, Gilead, MPP. UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. 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UN Rapporteur Signals Legal Shift to Hold Air Polluters Accountable 10/03/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño (second left at table) presents her report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. While air pollution claims more than eight million lives annually, the burden of proving exactly which air polluters or tailpipes caused a specific lung cancer or child’s asthma attack has rested firmly on the shoulders of the sick. That is about to change, according to a landmark United Nations (UN) report by Astrid Puentes Riaño, Special Rapporteur on the right to a clean environment, presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She signals a seismic shift in international jurisprudence: moving the burden of proof away from the victims and onto the state, ultimately targeting the polluters. This mechanism suggests that once dangerous pollution levels and health harms are established in an area, the onus shifts to holding governments accountable when they fail to prevent exposure to dangerous contamination. UN Special Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño spoke with Health Policy Watch in Geneva. “Legally speaking, there is a conclusion from the Inter-American system and also the European system that whenever there are victims of air pollution, and there is clarity of the high risks that air pollution has on their health and their life, then we have to change the burden of proof,” Puentes Riaño said in an interview with Health Policy Watch. The report of the renowned environmental lawyer highlights that this legal precedent has already been set. Relying on recent landmark cases before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights – a case she litigated herself – and the European Court of Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur emphasized that state responsibility is established if exposure is demonstrated alongside a failure to prevent contamination by air polluters. The mandate calls on all states to universally recognize this jurisprudence and implement domestic regulations that “place the burden of proof on the polluter by requiring injunctive relief in the form of payment of fees and penalties.” This will protect populations who suffer from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. “People should not be having to prove the link because that’s very difficult legally,” Puentes Riaño added. “That should be assumed, and then it’s for the state to actually change the burden of proof”. Subsidies for air polluters exacerbate crisis A stark funding disparity that leaves clean air initiatives with less than 1% of comparative funding. Implementing this legal shift and combatting the air pollution crisis requires overcoming financial roadblocks. The Special Rapporteur’s presentation to the council highlighted the major difference between government investments in public health versus heavily polluting industries. Between 2018 and 2024, an average of $600 billion was spent globally per year subsidizing fossil fuels, while only $3.6 billion was invested annually in controlling outdoor air pollution – less than 1% of the spend on subsidies, Puentes Riaño noted during the Geneva discussions. “There is money in the world, and we know that; unfortunately, there’s more money being used for fossil fuels and war,” she stated. Consequently, 99% of the global population breathes toxic air, with the highest levels concentrated in low- and middle-income countries. Pollution has also been exported from the Global North to the Global South, yet international accountability for air polluters remains limited, added Weenarin Lulitanonda, co-founder of the Thailand Clean Air Network. In Southeast Asia, nearly 20% of Thailand’s 65 million people suffer from illnesses related to atmospheric toxicity. “If you live in Chiang Mai right now, about four to five months of the year you’re breathing in toxic air,” Lulitanonda said. Battling the respiratory emergency on the ground Panelists at the Geneva discussions shared perspectives on the health and developmental impacts of the global air pollution crisis. Polluted air frequently leads to worsening anxiety disorders, cognitive developmental delays, and respiratory distress in early childhood. At the panel discussion, civil society advocates detailed the lifelong harms inflicted on children in India. “For a long time, air pollution was considered an environmental hazard … but the health connect came only when these stories were told,” Bhavreen Kandhari, co-founder of the Warrior Moms movement in India, explained. “When a mother speaks, then everyone states their own experiences, and that is how the impact started to show”. Kandhari asked that clean air standards be legally enforced rather than treated as recommendations. Her testimony underscored the Special Rapporteur’s finding that structural inequalities create “sacrifice zones,” where marginalized communities face cumulative health harms from nearby air polluters. Experts note that overcoming this environmental blight requires predictable public finance and international solidarity. Roqaya Dhaif, a human rights policy specialist at the UN Development Programme, stated during the debate that developing nations require reliable technology transfers and capacity building to transition towards clean energy. “The root causes of pollution are in fact development challenges,” Dhaif said. “To truly tackle air pollution, we must address it through integrated, equitable development policies”. WHO data highlights scale of atmospheric toxicity Thick smog blankets the skyline of Bangkok, Thailand, in 2018. Recent scientific data from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates that this respiratory emergency is a leading global cause of death. Rüdiger Krech, interim director of the WHO department of environment, climate change, and health, outlined the physiological impacts of toxic air to the delegates. “Fine particulate matters penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, triggering asthma attacks in children, heart attacks and strokes in adults,” Krech said. “These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but a fundamental health right”. These everyday preventable harms highlight why clean air is not only an environmental necessity but also a fundamental health right. To assist member states in tracking national progress on these exposures and policies, the WHO recently updated its Health and Environment Scorecards, condensing 25 key indicators into a single summary score. “Tackling environmental risks isn’t optional – it’s a prescription for better health, stronger economies, and a safer future,” Maria Neira, WHO director of Environment, Climate Change, and Health, stated regarding the updated scorecards. “You can’t have healthy people on a sick planet”. To advance this, a new voluntary target calls on all countries to cut the health impacts of air pollution by 50% by 2040. Fossil fuel producers hit brakes on action A representative from Bahrain emphasized the need to balance environmental protections with national economic development. While most countries supported the report’s findings and the necessity of concrete measures, representatives from major fossil fuel-producing countries responded with caution to the call to drastically reduce emissions from air polluters. Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group, argued that the right to a clean environment must be “progressively implemented”. The delegation stated that tackling the issue requires an approach that respects national circumstances and the specific features of each country, signaling a desire for more time to implement measures without disrupting their economies. Other oil- and gas-producing nations echoed this sentiment, emphasizing the need to balance environmental protection with domestic economic development. Oman advocated for a framework that “balances between economic growth and conservation of natural resources”. Similarly, Bahrain highlighted its 2060 net-zero targets but insisted that international efforts must be based on “common differentiated responsibilities”. This approach contrasted sharply with the requests expressed by vulnerable nations facing the brunt of the environmental blight, with the Marshall Islands explicitly demanding concrete steps to “rapidly and equitably transition away from production and use of fossil fuel”. Corporate complicity shields air polluters Industrial chimneys release thick plumes of smoke into the atmosphere. This would also require confronting the corporate actors and business interests that delay health-based regulations. The report notes that influence from sectors linked to emission drivers continues to weaken environmental measures. The pushback is a daily reality for policymakers attempting to strengthen air quality frameworks, Puentes Riaño confirmed. She noted that state authorities frequently encounter resistance from industries claiming that clean air measures are too costly or impossible to implement. “When it comes to actually pushing for legislation behind the scenes, it is big corporations, the big polluters, that are pushing back on this,” Thailand Clean Air Network’s Lulitanonda added. ” Corporations will only internalize the externalities if it’s mandated or required; there’s no other way,” explained the economist who specializes in the ‘hidden costs’ of environmental degradation. To achieve this, businesses must conduct human rights due diligence and comply with environmental licensing conditions, Puentes Riaño states in her report. Shifting the burden of proof, alongside imposing injunctive fees, would force air polluters to prioritize public health over unregulated expansion. Charting a path forward Air Pollution and Heatwaves Take Centre Stage at Mumbai Climate Week This claim was countered by Roberto Céspedes, Minister Counselor at the permanent mission of Costa Rica. “Taking care of the environment is good business,” he said. “It will, of course, cost money at the beginning, but it will save countless more in the future, and it makes economic sense to invest in this.” Protecting public health from toxic emissions is increasingly recognized as a catalyst for sustainable development rather than a barrier to economic growth. A transition to renewable energy sources mitigates climate change and reduces the healthcare burdens associated with the respiratory emergency, the report states. To prevent further harm, the report advises enacting a presumption against granting permits for new contaminating facilities in already overburdened communities, while requiring rigorous environmental, social, and human rights impact assessments—including specific health evaluations—for any major polluting activities Puentes Riaño plans to take these findings to the upcoming World Health Assembly and international climate negotiations. By shifting the burden of proof and demanding strict corporate accountability, the international community has the tools necessary to regulate air polluters and protect future generations, she stated. Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen, urf/Getty Images via Canva, Info Timisoara/Pixabay via Canva. Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Only US Votes Against Women’s Rights Document at UN Commission 10/03/2026 Kerry Cullinan CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez at the 70th session of the commission. The United States was isolated in its opposition to the adoption of “agreed conclusions” at the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) on Tuesday, recording the only “no” vote at the United Nations headquarters in New York on Monday. There were 37 votes in favour and six abstentions from Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania, and Saudi Arabia. The CSW is made up of 45 elected members. “Prior to the adoption, the representative of the United States [Dan Negrea] first proposed that its consideration be deferred, then that the text be withdrawn and then proposed eight amendments to the text,” according to a UN media release. The US sought the removal of “controversial social issues” from the document, Devex reports. US objections included “ambiguous language promoting gender ideology”, “vague, unqualified commitments to sexual and reproductive health that can be interpreted as implying abortion rights”, and “censorship language on regulating artificial intelligence”, according to the UN media release. Earlier, Nigeria and Egypt called for more time to reach consensus – the usual route for UN decision-making and the only route the CSW has taken in 70 years. Pakistan later proposed voting separately on each of the US’s eight amendments. However, CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica said that “every effort has been made to listen to delegations and to reflect the diversity of views expressed”. “We are convinced that the text represents the most balanced outcome achievable at this stage,” Valverde said, adding that her Bureau has decided to put the text to a vote. Measures to address gender-based violence UN Women director Sima Bahous and CSW chair Maritza Chan Valverde from Costa Rica The CSW, which was established in 1946, is the main global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality, and the rights and the empowerment of women. The theme of this year’s CSW is “ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls” by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, as well as structural barriers to justice The agreed conclusions “seek to create justice systems that work for everyone equally”, according to Valverde. The proposals focus strongly on justice for survivors of gender-based violence, including integrating gender-responsive access to justice across sectors, formally recognising community justice actors, and introducing new language on digital justice and AI governance aimed at protecting women and girls. The text also strengthens standardised systems for gender-based violence data and promotes a whole-of-society approach that recognises civil society’s role. Valverde stressed that hard-won progress on gender equality must not be reversed. “We owe it to the trailblazers who charted the path for us, and to those who shall follow in our footsteps. To our mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters,” she said. ‘Epstein criminal enterprise’ President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock. President of the UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock told the opening of CSW that the backlash against women’s rights “feels as though we are forced to fight the same old battles again and again, battles from 80 years ago”. Baerbock, a former German foreign minister, pointed out that she is only the fifth woman to be President of the General Assembly and that, in 80 years, a woman has never been Secretary-General. “If we do not address the fact that three-quarters of parliamentarians worldwide are men, and 103 countries have never had a female Head of State, then we will hardly deliver on justice. “Women’s rights are nothing new,” she added. “They have been embedded in the DNA of this institution from the very beginning.” “We will not stop fighting for equal representation and women’s rights… until the women of Afghanistan are free and girls worldwide are not being forced anymore to marry before they finish school; until we see justice for survivors of sexual abuse, whether it occurs at home or as part of an exploitive global sexual network as exposed in the Epstein files; where women are equally paid and represented, whether in newsrooms, in boardrooms, in governments and yes, at the helm of this institution, our United Nations,” said Baerbock. UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, also referred to Jeffrey Epstein, remarking that “the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise… have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.” Deeply contested Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, Josefina Sabate, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, “The decision to break consensus and proceed to a vote underscores how deeply contested commitments to gender equality, human rights and access to justice remain in this current geopolitical moment,” Maitree Muzumdar, co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors.” Muzumdar, who is based in India. also criticised member states for approaching access to justice as a “technical issue rather than a political issue, focusing on procedural reforms without addressing the structural conditions that produce injustice.” The negotiations revealed resistance by powerful states and mobilised anti-gender, anti-rights actors, Argentinian activist Josefina Sabate, also co-convenor of the Young Feminists’ Caucus, paid tribute to the CSW’s chair’s ability to ensure that a document was adopted. Sabate said there has been a “real pushback in terms of gender equality policies” in Latin America following the election of conservatives in Argentina and now Chile. As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy
As ‘Gulf War 3’ Threatens Progress on Air Pollution, ‘Market Forces’ May Provide Impetus for Change 10/03/2026 Chetan Bhattacharji Israel’s attack on Iran’s oil depot has caused massive fires, thick smoke and black acid rain. The 12th Better Air Quality conference in Bangkok, which opens on Wednesday, is the first large climate and air quality gathering since the US and Israel attacked Iran, triggering an oil and gas-energy crisis. BANGKOK – The ‘Gulf War 3’ threatens to slow down climate action and the move to cleaner air. However, in the first major climate conference since the war began, experts are banking on progress thanks to market forces and the cost-benefit of countries not just sticking to the current climate and air quality ambitions but scaling these up. “There’s no doubt it [fighting in the Gulf] will slow progress. However, the fact is that the market forces are ultimately going to drive things. There’s only so much political will can do,” Nathan Borgford-Parnell, scientific affairs lead at the UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), told Health Policy Watch. He was speaking on the eve of the Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, which is being held in Bangkok from Wednesday until Friday (11-13 March), bringing together scientists, funders, think-tanks, and civil society. “The United States is really boosting coal now. But coal energy is decreasing rapidly in the US, not because of some green policy, but because of the economics of it. Renewable energies are cheaper now. And those economics are not going to change,” Borgford-Parnell explained. The conference is being organised by Clean Air Asia, with co-organisers CCAC, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Cleaner solutions protect health Bjarne Pedersen, executive director of Clean Air Asia, said that while there can be tension between environmental ambition and short-term economic pressures, this can be resolved by taking a longer-term outlook. “Clean air solutions increasingly show that protecting health, improving productivity, and supporting economic growth can go hand in hand,” said Pedersen. He sees the conference as an opportunity to “elevate air quality from a relatively niche environmental issue to a cross-cutting investment priority” that delivers benefits across sectors. Glynda Bathan-Baterina, deputy executive director of Clean Air Asia, concedes that air pollution control measures are “often seen as a cost rather than an investment”. She lists the “positive returns on clean air investments” as “improved health, increased crop yields, more livelihoods from green industries, and greater competitiveness of cities.” Later this year, the CCAC is expected to update its report of 25 science-based solutions, making a strong case for local and national economic benefits. However, ADB refused to comment on the issue on the grounds that it is “politically sensitive.” Nathan Borgford-Parnell (right), scientific affairs lead, at the UN Climate and Clean Air Coalition, and panellists at an event before the Better Air Quality meeting. Health risks from air pollution Over eight million deaths are attributed to air pollution annually. If there’s a silver lining, Borgford-Parnell assesses that this number could remain stable. On the one hand, air pollution, in particular PM2.5 fine particulate matter pollution, has been decreasing because of economic forces, and countries like India and China are taking steps to reduce it, he says. On the other hand, the rapidly ageing global population, – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – is more susceptible to illness and premature death. The WHO’s World Health Assembly and its Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health last year set a “voluntary target” to cut premature deaths caused by air pollution by 50% by 2040. Toxic air is linked to millions of cases of heart attacks, childhood asthma, COPD or chronic lung disease, diabetes, strokes, dementia and lung cancer. Air pollution’s link to diabetes and dementia is also a growing concern. It worsens the complications of diabetes, and increases the risk of people developing type 2 diabetes through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress, which can cause cell damage. With dementia, air pollution increases risk through similar inflammatory pathways and by damaging blood vessels. This can lead to vascular dementia and increase the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. The tiny particles from pollution can also directly enter the brain, potentially causing cellular damage. A Better Air Quality 2026 side-event. ‘Together for clear skies’ The theme for this 12th BAQ is Together for Clear Skies. But the ‘together’ part is hard to achieve. Air pollution is a transboundary issue, which means that one region or one country is often polluted by air from outside its jurisdiction. The World Bank points out that the governance systems across nations in the most polluted region of the world – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan – remain largely “siloed, reactive, and compliance-oriented rather than preventive”. Its report, A Breath of Change, documents the cross-border crisis in the northern belt of South Asia, across the plains and the Himalayan foothills, which is home to about one billion people. Around 68% of the pollution in Nepal’s Terai region, for example, originates in other countries. Even in areas with the highest local contribution, such as Kathmandu Valley (Nepal), Uttar Pradesh (India), and Dhaka (Bangladesh), over a third of the pollution can be from other countries. The hosts have highlighted at least four regional agreements on air pollution control. Two for South Asia are the Malé Declaration (1998) and Thimpu Outcome (2024), and two for South East Asia are the ASEAN Agreement and Asia-Pacific Regional Action Programme on Air Pollution (RAPAP), both adopted in 2022. But progress, especially in South Asia, has been slow. “Countries like the PRC (China) have shown that economic growth can be decoupled from its environmental impacts, including air pollution. In seven years, PRC was able to reduce PM2.5 pollution by more than 50%, while growing its economy,” says Bathan-Baterina. The hosts hope that financing discussions at the conference will demonstrate that clean air solutions can attract investment. “Many governments already have air quality plans but face challenges in translating them into finance-able programs,” Pedersen says. By highlighting the economic returns and health savings associated with cleaner air, the conference aims to strengthen the case for sustained investment. Despite being closely linked, air quality and climate action are still treated by many as two separate buckets. But Pedersen points out that linking air quality initiatives to climate finance frameworks can help unlock new funding streams for cleaner air. Image Credits: UN-CCAC., Chetan Bhattacharija . Posts navigation Older posts