PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study reveals possible future health impacts related to climate mitigation

2023-05-20
(Press-News.org) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Reduce fossil fuel use and air quality will improve, right? It might not be as straightforward as it appears, according to a Penn State-led research team. They explored almost 30,000 simulated future scenarios and found that some climate mitigation efforts could lead to harmful health impacts in certain geographic areas. 

Their results were published today (May 18) in Nature Sustainability. 

“In general, reducing fossil fuel use is good for climate mitigation and good for cleaning up the air, and the modeling studies have always found health benefits from climate mitigation,” said corresponding author Wei Peng, assistant professor of international affairs and of civil and environmental engineering at Penn State, who has conducted research in this area for a decade. “But in this study, for the first time, we were able to see potential co-harm occur in a certain part of the scenarios.” 

The researchers found some scenarios where fossil fuel reduction requires a significant land use change to grow bioenergy resources, such as algae and plants like corn stalks and barley straw that can be used to create biofuels including types of ethanol and biodiesel. In these scenarios, deforestation could occur on a grander scale for certain areas, such as Russia and Canada, leading to worsening air quality. As a result, people in these areas with worsened air quality could suffer from more respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, which could lead to more premature deaths, said the researchers.

The researchers obtained these results by using an exploratory ensemble approach, which samples several variables at different levels  — for example, carbon emissions at different levels of emission — to obtain an understanding of the breadth of potential future scenarios. 

“Instead of using narrative-based scenarios, which tend to ask questions such as, ‘What if we have a high inequality world?’ or ‘What if we have a low carbon development world?’ we developed a large ensemble of scenarios,” said first author Xinyuan Huang, a doctoral student in the Penn State Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. “This approach couples models of climate, energy and health to explore a wide range of plausible futures."

In this assessment, the researchers modeled the energy and land system changes for 32 geopolitical regions based on the Global Change Analysis Model, an open-source integrated assessment model. They then conducted the air quality and health impact assessment for nearly 200 countries.

Peng said that since the future is deeply uncertain, the likelihood of potential future scenarios that involve health co-harms are unknown, but their findings demonstrate the possibilities of unintended consequences of climate mitigation. 

“What I find especially useful is that now we can start to think about the levers we have, and how we can use them to mitigate harmful impacts and to embrace the benefits,” she said. “If we go for the bioenergy-heavy future, then we really need to pay attention to how we manage land.”

Levers for mitigating harmful impacts could include different approaches to any necessary deforestation, according to Peng. She said that clear cutting instead of burning, for example, still allows unavoidable deforestation but lessens the impact on air quality. 

For next steps, the researchers plan to assess the impacts at an even finer geographic resolution.

“If we want to learn more about energy system changes and the resulting distribution of health impacts, we need more analysis at the finer resolution,” Huang said. “For example, we are now working on a new scenario ensemble at the state and county level for the United States, so that it could be more informative for policymakers.”

The other authors on the paper are Vivek Srikrishnan of the Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering at Cornell University, Jonathan Lamontagne of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Tufts University, and Klaus Keller of the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College. 

The National Science Foundation, the Penn State Institutes of Energy and the Environment, the Penn State Institute of Computational and Data Sciences, and Dartmouth College funded this research.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study finds cardiovascular risk score improves after one year of semaglutide use in patients with overweight and obesity

2023-05-20
New research presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity in Dublin, Ireland shows that patients treated with the obesity drug semaglutide have a decreased cardiovascular risk score after one year of use. The study is by Dr Andres Acosta and Dr Wissam Ghusn, Precision Medicine for Obesity Program at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA and colleagues. Obesity is a major risk factor for the development of abnormal blood fat levels, type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), high blood pressure, and obstructive sleep apnoea. These comorbidities are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) that represents ...

Semaglutide shown to be effective for weight loss in multicentre, one-year real-world study

2023-05-20
New research presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO2023, Dublin, 17-20 May) shows that the obesity drug semaglutide is effective for weight loss in a multicentre, 1-year-long real-world study. The study is by Dr Andres Acosta and Dr Wissam Ghusn, Precision Medicine for Obesity Program at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA and colleagues. Semaglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist, is the most recently FDA-approved anti-obesity medication. It has shown significant weight loss outcomes in multiple long-term randomised clinical trials and short-term real-world studies. However, little is known about ...

Consequences of uncontrolled hunger in teenagers living with obesity examined in international study

2023-05-20
Teenagers living with obesity who say hunger is preventing them from losing weight (hunger-barrier ALwO) perceive their weight more negatively and worry about it more than youngsters who don’t see hunger as an obstacle, new research being presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May) shows. The international study also found that hunger-barrier ALwO are more likely to be female and more likely to say their weight makes them unhappy and leads to them being bullied. They are also more likely to be actively trying to lose weight. Dr Bassam Bin-Abbas, of the Department of Paediatrics, King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Riyadh, ...

Stress hormone measured in hair predicts who is likely to suffer from cardiovascular diseases

2023-05-20
New research being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May) suggests that glucocorticoid levels (a class of steroid hormones secreted as a response to stress) present in the hair of individuals may indicate which of them are more likely to suffer from cardiovascular diseases (CVD) in the future. “There is a tremendous amount of evidence that chronic stress is a serious factor in determining overall health. Now our findings indicate that people with higher long-term hair glucocorticoid ...

New high risk, high reward studies will tackle key unanswered questions about our planet

2023-05-20
NERC has invested £25 million in a host of high risk, high reward research projects to tackle critical environment challenges. The 44 projects cover the full spectrum of environmental science including geology, atmospheric science, biodiversity and ecology. The research will, for example:  improve our understanding of volcanic activity such as eruptions a lava flows age the Earth’s solid inner core investigate historic mass extinction events predict future changes to carbon ...

A toddler’s gut bacteria predict whether they will be overweight at 5 years old

2023-05-20
The make-up and volume of gut bacteria in toddlers at 3.5 years old is predictive of body mass index (BMI) at age 5, irrespective of whether they are born prematurely or not, according to new research, being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May). The findings also identified differences in the bacteria that colonise the gut seen in adults living with obesity, suggesting that changes in the gut microbiota that predispose to adult obesity begin in early childhood. The make-up of the gut microbiota grows and changes in the first few months and years of life and ...

Scientists will tune-in to the sound of the Amazon to discover how climate change and human disturbance are affecting tropical forest animals

Scientists will tune-in to the sound of the Amazon to discover how climate change and human disturbance are affecting tropical forest animals
2023-05-20
Scientists are to deploy a network of microphones in the Amazon rainforest to listen and measure the numbers and species of birds, insects and other wildlife. The use of ‘ecoacoustics’ forms part of RAINFAUNA - a £1 million study by an international team of researchers led by scientists at Lancaster University that will provide the first large-scale understanding of how humans are affecting the animals that call tropical forests home. Tropical forests are under threat. In the Amazon, at least 17% of primary ...

IOP Publishing celebrates 100th birthday of the oldest scientific measurement journal

2023-05-20
IOP Publishing (IOPP) is celebrating the 100th anniversary of Measurement Science and Technology, the world’s oldest scientific instrumentation and measurement journal and the first research journal produced by the Institute of Physics.   To mark the occasion, Measurement Science and Technology has pulled together a collection of articles which revisit some of the research themes published in the first volume, and looks at the latest advancements in metrology. The collection includes papers on developments in the fields of ultrasound ...

Treatment for opioid use disorder rises after Medicare OKs methadone coverage

2023-05-19
The use of methadone among Medicare beneficiaries to treat opioid use disorder increased sharply after the program began covering the drug, with evidence suggesting the change created new treatment rather than displacing use of other medications, according to a new RAND Corporation study.   Studying a large group of Medicare Advantage enrollees, the study found that a Medicare coverage expansion to include methadone in 2020 did not appear to reduce the use of buprenorphine, another medication used to treat opioid use disorder.   The study, published in the journal JAMA Network Open, found that much of the rise in methadone ...

Illinois Tech researchers unveil key predictors of bitcoin returns

Illinois Tech researchers unveil key predictors of bitcoin returns
2023-05-19
CHICAGO—May 19, 2023—Blockchain technology, investor sentiment, and economic stress levels are significant predictors of bitcoin returns, according to a groundbreaking paper from Illinois Institute of Technology researchers that provides empirical evidence to help guide investors, economists, and academics. Sang Baum “Solomon” Kang, associate professor of finance at Illinois Tech’s Stuart School of Business and co-author of the paper, also found that the cryptocurrency is detached from economic fundamentals and therefore may not effectively serve as a diversifier or safe-haven asset. Additionally, Kang reported that returns on commodities, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Marri trees a lifeline for many native bee species in biodiversity hotspot

Treatments used for HER2-positive breast cancers could help patients with rare gastrointestinal cancer

Little-studied RNA might be key to regulating genetic disorders like epilepsy, autism

UB researchers show why cannabis policies should shift to a harm reduction, health promotion approach to safeguard public health

Live well, think well: Research shows healthy habits tied to brain health

Could poor sleep in middle age speed up brain aging?

Fossils unveil how southern Europe’s ecosystem changed through Glacial-Interglacial Stages

Your ability to balance on one leg may be a reliable indicator of neuromuscular aging, with men and women showing significant declines over the decades

Most young adults in the UK consider non-consensual condom removal during sex to be wrong and a violation of consent, with almost 9 in 10 seeing it as a form of sexual assault, per survey of 18-25-yea

Under climate change scenarios, 30-44% more land in Ethiopia might become suitable for growing arabica coffee by 2080, although some cultivated areas might also become unsuitable, per modelling study

Cockroaches and maggots might be able to turn an invasive seaweed into a high quality compost, finds a new experimental study which provides hope for the environment and the circular economy

Implantable device may prevent death from opioid overdose

Half of young adults support prison time for non-consensual condom removal

‘Paleo-robots’ to help scientists understand how fish started to walk on land

Study: Robotic automation, AI will speed up scientific progress in science laboratories

Paleontologists discover Colorado ‘swamp dweller’ that lived alongside dinosaurs

Repeated COVID vaccines enhance mucosal immunity against the virus

MD Anderson expands arts experience program to enhance healing and well-being for patients

Students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) face barriers to medical school admission, study finds

Symbiosis in ancient Corals

Researchers receive grant to study invasive autumn olive

New research shows urine tests may detect early diseases

Antibiotics and antifungals may slightly affect Parkinson's risk, study finds

Nixing narcolepsy nightmares

Mass General Brigham selected to receive $3.29 million award from ARPA-H’s Sprint for Women’s Health

The decision to eat may come down to these three neurons

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution researchers use the sounds of healthy coral reefs to encourage growth of a new species of coral larvae

Researchers at NYU Tandon School of Engineering and KAIST develop method to 'hear' defects in promising nanomaterial

Biodiversity increases nutrient availability

American Society of Anesthesiologists names Donald E. Arnold, M.D., FACHE, FASA, new president

[Press-News.org] New study reveals possible future health impacts related to climate mitigation