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Re: Scientists: Warming may greatest threat to tropical species

by "00ZBN" <00ZBN@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 6, 2008 at 12:29 PM

"Mike M" <MichaelMLGPR@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:12c1ee79-89ab-4fdf-91b3-993698d7090d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Scientists: Warming may greatest threat to tropical species

This scaremongering effort is not as good as the one below!!!
Mine's a winner!


Global Warming Set To Fan The HIV Fire

April 29, 2008

http://news.theage.com.au/global-warming-set-to-fan-the-hiv-fire/20080430-29eh.html



Climate change is the latest threat to the world's growing HIV epidemic, 
say Australian experts who warn of the "grim" outlook in the fight 
against the infectious disease.



A leading professor of health and human rights, Daniel Tarantola, has 
cautioned that global warming will indirectly make citizens of 
developing countries even more vulnerable to death and severe ill health 
from HIV/AIDS.



"It was clear soon after the emergence of the HIV epidemic that 
discrimination, gender inequality and lack of access to essential 
services have made some populations more vulnerable than others," said 
Prof Tarantola, of the University of NSW.



Those problems had not gone away, he said, and extra threats were 
lurking on the horizon "as the global economic situation deteriorates, 
food scarcity worsens and climate change begins to affect those who were 
already dependent on survival economies".



"Climate change will trigger a chain of events which is likely to 
increase the stress on society and result in higher vulnerability to 
diseases including HIV," said Prof Tarantola, due to address an HIV 
forum in Sydney.



Prominent HIV scientist Professor David Cooper, director of the National 
Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research, agreed environmental 
change would have a negative impact on HIV sufferers.



"Climate change will lead to food scarcity and poorer nutrition, putting 
people with perilous immune systems at more risk of dying of HIV, as 
well as contracting and transmitting new and unusual infections," Prof 
Cooper said.



"And this would effect Australia too, because these infections could 
potentially spread. Just look at the horror that SARS and avian flu have 
caused."



The specialist said the HIV landscape was grim, with 16,000 new 
infections worldwide each day and the failure of research to produce a 
much-needed cure or vaccine.



He echoed the deep pessimism of 35 top British and US scientists who 
predicted this week that a vaccine would be at least 10 years and maybe 
even 20 years away.



"It's a pretty grim situation," Prof Cooper said.



"I don't think we have any idea of how to harness a vaccine for this and 
we need a strong basic science breakthrough to get anywhere with it."



He said it was important to strengthen preventative measures proven to 
work, like condoms and circumcision, and continue to investigate other 
more hopeful avenues, like microbicide sex gels and anti-viral drugs to 
block infection.



© 2008 AAP









Warmest Regards

Bonzo

"What if a small group of these world leaders were to conclude the 
principal risk to the earth comes from the actions of the rich 
countries?...In order to save the planet, the group decides: Isn't the 
only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? 
Isn't it our responsibility to bring this about?" Maurice Strong,1990




 2 Posts in Topic:
Re: Scientists: Warming may greatest threat to tropical species
"00ZBN" <00Z  2008-05-06 12:29:09 
Re: Scientists: Warming may greatest threat to tropical species
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-05-15 03:19:30 

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tan12V112 Fri May 16 11:37:24 CDT 2008.