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Pathways to reducing climate change-induced mortality: The role of health expenditure, environmental regulations, climate technology, and disaster management

気候変動による死亡率低減への道筋:医療支出、環境規制、気候技術、災害管理の役割 (AI 翻訳)

Emmanuel Uche, Nicholas M. Odhiambo

Social Sciences & Humanities Open📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-04-25#政策Origin: Global
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssaho.2026.102697
原典: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssaho.2026.102697

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本研究は、新興8カ国(1995-2023年)のパネルデータを用い、医療支出、環境規制、気候技術、災害管理が気候変動関連死亡率に与える影響を分析。環境規制と災害管理は死亡率を有意に減少させる一方、医療支出と気候技術は理論に反して効果が認められなかった。政策の再調整が示唆される。

English

This study analyzes panel data (1995-2023) from eight emerging economies to examine the effects of health expenditure, environmental regulations, climate technology, and disaster management on climate change-induced mortality. Environmental regulations and disaster management significantly reduce mortality, while health expenditure and climate technology fail to do so, suggesting a need for policy realignment to meet SDG 3.9.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本は災害管理に優れるが、気候変動による健康影響への対策や環境規制の強化は今後の課題。新興国の知見は日本の国際協力に示唆を与える。

In the global GX context

The paper offers global insights on policy levers to reduce climate-related mortality, relevant for countries designing climate adaptation and health policies. Its findings on the ineffectiveness of climate technology in emerging contexts caution against technology-focused approaches without complementary measures.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:The heterogeneous effects across quantiles provide a nuanced understanding of how policies impact mortality, useful for future research on climate-health pathways.

🏛政策担当者:Policymakers should prioritize strengthening environmental regulations and disaster management to achieve SDG 3.9, and reassess the allocation of health and climate technology budgets.

📄 Abstract(原文)

This study offers new insights into mitigating climate change-induced mortality in emerging economies. It emphasizes the critical roles of health expenditure, environmental regulations, climate technology, and disaster management, which have rarely been explored in prior investigations. On this basis, annual data (1995-2023) from eight emerging countries were analyzed using cutting-edge panel estimators that are robust to cross-sectional nuances. Based on the estimates of the quantile via moments (QvM) technique, the study unraveled the heterogeneous implications of the selected variables on climate change-induced mortality. The heterogeneous effects underscore varying policy initiatives of each country. Among the variables, environmental control and disaster management substantially aligned with SDG 3.9 by significantly minimizing climate change-induced mortality across all quantiles. Hence, policymakers need to strengthen existing environmental regulations and disaster management to ensure they reduce climate change-related mortality as optimally as possible. Conversely, health expenditure and climate technology invalidated the theoretical proposition by failing to reduce climate change mortality over the distributions. Therefore, it is pertinent to realign health expenditure and climate technology to ensure they respond to SDG 3.9 by reducing climate change-induced mortality. More policy insights are articulated to ensure minimal climate change-related mortality in line with SDG 3.9. • Death associated with climate change is explored. • The study explored the perspectives of eight emerging economies. • The Quantile-via-Moments panel estimator is employed for analysis. • Health expenditure and climate technology failed to mitigate climate change mortalities. • Environmental regulations and disaster management reduced climate change mortalities.

🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース

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