Brazil officially launched the Belém Health Action Plan at the COP30 climate summit in Belém, marking the country’s first major national climate-health adaptation strategy. This initiative recognizes that climate change is no longer solely an environmental issue but a profound public health crisis, impacting disease vectors, air quality, and water security. The plan outlines specific actions aimed at building climate-resilient health systems capable of coping with the projected increase in extreme weather events and heatwaves.
The comprehensive plan focuses on three core pillars. First, it commits to strengthening disease surveillance and response capacities, particularly for climate-sensitive infectious diseases such as dengue, malaria, and leishmaniasis, whose geographical ranges are expanding due to rising temperatures. Second, the plan prioritizes support for vulnerable populations, including indigenous communities and residents of low-lying coastal areas, who are disproportionately affected by climate-related health shocks. Third, it mandates the integration of climate risk assessments into all major public health policies.
The launch was reinforced by a joint call from the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Brazilian government, urging rapid, coordinated global action under this framework. This collaboration successfully positions Brazil as a proactive global player in the emerging field of climate-health transition, setting a precedent for other nations in the Global South to integrate health resilience into their national climate strategies.



