Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care, Science

MEDIA RELEASE: Healthy Futures exposes the urgent threat of methane emissions to Australian health in a new report

Healthy Futures 3 mins read

20th November, 2024

 

Healthy Futures, a leading health and climate advocacy organisation committed to addressing the health impacts of climate change, will release a groundbreaking report next Tuesday the 26th of November - "Toxic air, urgent action: Unveiling a methane health crisis." The report details the growing threat climate change poses to Australians' health and the direct link between methane and deadly air pollution known as ground ozone – a dense invisible smog that blankets the land and causes life threatening health conditions. 

 

The report reveals the alarming consequences of methane emissions on public health, particularly from the coal and gas industry. It calls for the urgent need for the Australian government to take decisive action to curb methane emissions to protect health. 

 

“Methane is a potent greenhouse gas that significantly contributes to climate change. It also happens to be short-lived in the atmosphere, meaning if we dramatically reduce methane emissions now, its impact will diminish relatively quickly. This would have a substantial effect slowing down climate change and potentially allow us to stay below the 1.5-degree Celsius warming limit set by the Paris Agreement, a threshold that we desperately need to attempt to stay under,” said Dr John Van Der Kallen, Rheumatologist

 

The report outlines how methane, because of its contribution to catastrophic climate change and because of its role in forming ground ozone pollution (smog), is:

  • Increasing the frequency and severity of heat-related illnesses, including deaths 

  • Increasing the respiratory exacerbation and development of asthma and bronchitis 

  • Causing avoidable deaths attributable to air pollution 

  • Leading to food insecurity because of damaging ground ozone impacts on crops 

  • Exacerbating severe mental health challenges from the escalating impacts of climate change, including increased anxiety and ecological grief. 

Methane pollution is toxic. By exacerbating climate change, methane is causing heat stress, harm from extreme weather, increased allergic and infectious diseases and mental health impacts. Reducing methane emissions will protect the health of Australians and mitigate against the worst impacts of climate change,” said Dr Kim Loo, Western Sydney GP. 

The report calls for immediate action to reduce methane emissions, specifically from fossil fuel operations - REGISTER HERE to attend the launch event next Tuesday the 26th of November.  

Media enquiries: Bronwyn McDonald | Healthy Futures | 0408 477 403 | [email protected]

 

Available for Interview: 

  • Dr Kim Loo, RACGP representative 

  • Dr John Van Der Kallen, Rheumatologist, DEA member, and previous DEA Chair

  • Dr Michael Bonning

  • Nurse Peggy Smith, NSWNMA 

  • Hannah Beaton, UNSW Methane Researcher

- END -


Key Facts:

 

Report Summary

At Healthy Futures, we recognise the urgent need to address the health impacts of fossil methane emissions, particularly from coal and gas production. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, trapping over 80 times more heat than carbon dioxide in a 20-year timeframe. Methane accelerates climate change and contributes to the formation of ground-level ozone, a harmful air pollutant. Our report highlights the multifaceted health risks of methane emissions and calls for immediate action to mitigate these threats.

Key Findings

Methane & Climate Change: The impacts of climate change, driven by methane emissions, create a public health emergency. Heat-related illnesses, food insecurity, forced migration, and the spread of infectious diseases are intensifying. Additionally, mental health challenges such as anxiety and ecological grief are becoming more prevalent, particularly among those facing the brunt of climate change.

Air Pollution & Public Health: Methane is a precursor to ground-level ozone (smog), exacerbating respiratory conditions like asthma, bronchitis and heart disease. Ground ozone exposure also impacts crop yields, threatening global food security by reducing the production of staple grains like wheat, rice and soy. The health and economic consequences of worsening air quality are already tangible for Australians.

Urgent Action

At Healthy Futures, we are calling for urgent methane mitigation measures as a critical lever to protect public health and the environment. Reducing methane emissions, specifically from fossil fuel production, offers immediate benefits by slowing the pace of global warming and reducing harmful air pollutants. According to the International Energy Agency, a 75% reduction in fossil methane emissions by 2030 is achievable and essential.

The health benefits of methane abatement are immediate and profound. By reducing methane emissions, we can prevent:

  • Nearly one million premature deaths globally by 2050.

  • Millions of asthma-related hospital visits and emergency admissions.

  • Significant losses in crop yields, preventing hunger and malnutrition.

Moving Forward

We call on stakeholders to prioritise advocating for methane reduction. We want the federal and state governments to put strong regulatory frameworks in place for methane monitoring, reporting, and abatement, yielding immediate health improvements and long-term climate stability. Together, we can tackle methane emissions and safeguard public health.

We look forward to your continued engagement and action as we release the Healthy Futures Report. Your leadership and commitment ensure a healthier, more sustainable future for all.


Contact details:

Bronwyn McDonald - 0408 477 403 - [email protected]

More from this category

  • Indigenous, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 10/07/2025
  • 08:01
Monash University

Monash expert: Improving bone health in First Nations communities

AsNAIDOC Week continues, a Monash University studypublished in the MJA has found that increasing bone health awareness across Indigenous communities by a Community-led, co-created education program was valued as it would be beneficial for Indigenous people across the life course. “To be effective, incorporating traditional Indigenous ways and knowledge along with present‐day health evidence is required,” the researchers found. Available to comment: Dr Troy Walker, who did this work with theMonash School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Department of MedicineContact: +61 3 9903 4840 or [email protected] Musculoskeletal health, strength and conditioning, Aboriginal health Diet, nutrition, lifestyle medicine Clinical pain…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 10/07/2025
  • 07:00
Monash University

Researchers reveal that transparent data-sharing is a powerful signal of study quality in pregnancy research

A global study led by researchers at the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University has found that clinical trials which share their raw data are significantly more likely to be trustworthy and well-conducted, raising fresh concerns about how evidence is selected and used in medical guidelines. The research, published in The Lancet’s eClinicalMedicine, analysed 265 randomised controlled trials (RCTs) involving more than 65,000 women. These trials focused on different methods of labour induction, one of the most common interventions in maternity care. But according to lead author Dr Malitha Patabendige, Obstetrics and Gynaecology Registrar at Monash Health…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/07/2025
  • 18:11
AGFA HealthCare

AGFA HealthCare Achieves HITRUST I1 Certification, Demonstrating Its Commitment to and Compliance With Data Protection Standards, and Protecting Against Cybersecurity Threats

HITRUST certification validates that AGFA HealthCare is operating using leading security practices to protect sensitive information. MORTSEL, BE / ACCESS Newswire / July 9,…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.