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Scope
This dialogue will focus on the environmental determinants of health and the role of good governance in securing healthy and resilient populations. It will emphasize the need to prevent environmental degradation by systemically addressing its root causes, rather than merely addressing its consequences.
The session will also explore the transformations needed in economic and financial systems and sectors to support this shift. This includes internalizing environmental and health externalities, realigning subsidies and incentives, and adopting sustainable economic frameworks that prioritize longterm well-being over short-term gains.
The dialogue will also explore how a stronger science base and complex, cross-domain data analysis can uncover linkages between planetary and human health as a basis for action. AI-powered insights can also inform early warning systems and predictive models. Discussions will explore how science policy platforms and international governance instruments can move the needle for evidence-based transformation. These include the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services; the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; the newly adopted Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution; and the forthcoming Independent Panel for Evidence for action against Anti-Microbial Resistance. Governance instruments include the biodiversity-related Multilateral Environmental Agreements; the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework; the Pandemic Treaty; and the Global Framework on Chemicals, as well as the complementary chemical multilateral environmental agreements, including the global agreement on plastic pollution under negotiation. This can help policymakers effectively allocate resources and plan interventions that prevent environmental damage and reduce future health burdens.