Neftaly: The Relationship Between Climate Change and Public Health
Climate change is not only an environmental challenge—it is a growing public health crisis. Rising global temperatures, shifting weather patterns, and extreme events such as floods, droughts, and wildfires are already affecting human health in profound ways.
At Neftaly, we recognize that the impacts of climate change extend far beyond ecosystems—they also increase the spread of diseases, worsen air quality, and threaten food and water security. For example, warmer temperatures can expand the range of disease-carrying mosquitoes, while higher levels of air pollution from wildfires and fossil fuel combustion exacerbate respiratory illnesses like asthma.
We also see climate-related stress on healthcare systems, especially in vulnerable communities. Heatwaves strain emergency services, extreme weather damages hospitals and clinics, and food and water shortages can lead to malnutrition and related illnesses.
Neftaly’s approach to addressing this link focuses on prevention through sustainability. By accelerating the transition to clean energy, improving efficiency, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, we help cut the root causes of climate-related health risks. We also work with communities to develop resilience strategies, such as renewable-powered medical facilities and climate-adaptive infrastructure.
The connection between climate and health is clear: protecting the planet means protecting people. For Neftaly, that makes climate action not only an environmental imperative—but a moral one.
