 Today, we celebrate World Health Day, which this year focuses on our planet and our health. Climate change is one of the biggest health threats facing humanity. In 2020 alone, environmental factors and disasters displaced over 30 million people. Moreover, climate change has alarming effects on migrants and their health. In disaster, displaced people are often subject to increased health vulnerabilities related to unsafe water or inadequate sanitation and IGN. Displaced people are also more exposed to stressors, which can affect their mental and psychosocial well-being. These vulnerabilities are often exacerbated by limited access to health care services. Climate change can also cause indirect health impacts in the forms of malnutrition and conflict linked to food and resource insecurity, which can further contribute to drivers of migration. Unfortunately, climate-related health hazards are expected to become more frequent and environmental migration is expected to increase. We need to build climate-resilience health systems, which will protect those faced with health threats linked to climate change. The inclusion of migration health considerations in environmental policies and dialogues should be therefore essential. We should prioritize community-led climate interventions that address the health of migrants and the reasons they leave their homes. On World Else Day, I join you and leaders to ask us to re-imagine our world with clean air, water and food available to all, including migrants. We need to take climate action and raise our ambitions for the 27th Climate Change Conference. We need to increase progress and implementing the global compact for migration. For an else here tomorrow.