Public Health
Volume 122, Issue 7 , Pages 647-652, July 2008

Peak oil: Will it be public health's greatest challenge?

  • P. Hanlon

      Affiliations

    • University of Glasgow, 1 Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RZ, UK
  • ,
  • G. McCartney

      Affiliations

    • NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Dalian House, St Vincent Street, Glasgow G3 8YZ, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: MRC Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, 4 Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RZ, UK. Tel.: +441413573949.

Received 13 April 2006; received in revised form 19 February 2008; accepted 26 March 2008.

Summary 

The health of populations is determined more by the social and economic determinants of health than by changes in technology, health services or short-term policy interventions. In the near future, there is likely to be a significant shortfall in energy supply, resulting in high energy prices and a reversal of many of the aspects of globalization that are currently taken for granted. If this happens, economic recession and restructuring could have a negative impact on health, not dissimilar to that experienced by the former Soviet Union when it attempted a rapid change in its economy. There is, however, the potential, through economic planning and sustainable development, to reduce the adverse effects of this change and use this opportunity to impact on a range of diseases which are, at least in part, caused by overconsumption, inequality and loss of community.

Keywords: Peak oil, Climate change, Overconsumption, Obesity, Inequality, Well-being

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PII: S0033-3506(08)00095-4

doi:10.1016/j.puhe.2008.03.020

Public Health
Volume 122, Issue 7 , Pages 647-652, July 2008