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Background and Overview
Pages 2-6

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From page 2...
... to organize a conference on the potential human health risks posed by global climate change, and strategies to address them-such as global health surveillance, public outreach, and education. Members of the NSTC, OSTP and CEQ foliated a working group to develop a preliminary agenda for the conference and later requested that the IOM join in planning, organizing, and conducting the conference.
From page 3...
... Confinuec! Excerpts from remarks at the Conference on Human Health and Global Climate Change, September 1 1, 1995.
From page 4...
... fought to make sure that the United States is at the forefront of a global environmental movement. We're striving to return greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000.
From page 5...
... These models, which provide an increasingly good fit between theory and observation of past global climate changes, indicate that, in a world with a~roximateIv twice the current concentration of carbon 1 - · 1 ,1 ~1 ~, , 1 1 , a~ox~ae, tne global mean temperature wall increase by I° to 4°C (2° to 7°F) , with significant regional vanations (e.g., somewhat less warning in the Northern Hemisphere due to air pollution)
From page 6...
... Temperature-related changes in the oceans will affect the world's coral reefs and ocean fisheries. Global agricultural production may be unchanged, although increased production in northern latitudes might be offset by decreases in tropical regions where many populations are already malnourished.


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