Tackling the issues children face as a result of climate change must be made a priority.
Save the Children's report, Feeling the Heat, illustrates the effects climate change will have on children.
Today, nearly nine million children die before their fifth birthdays due to a small number of preventable diseases, such as diarrhoea, malaria and pneumonia.
Climate change is set to worsen the conditions which contribute to the prevalence of these diseases, placing children at greater risk. The effects of climate change will reduce poor communities’ access to clean water, reduce their ability to grow nutritious food, increase food price fluctuations and allow malaria mosquitoes to spread.
Because the effects of climate change on children are so significant, Save the Children is urging national governments and the international community to work together to forge a way forward. It is imperative that world leaders put children first when they meet at the Copenhagen summit in December.
What needs to be done
Download Feeling the Heat: Child Survival in a Changing Climate [Adobe PDF, 560 Kb]
Find out more about how Save the Children makes children safe