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Cold homes will kill up to 200 older people a day, warns Age UK

Rising energy bills will put millions at risk from ‘fuel poverty gap’ Two hundred people, most of them elderly, will die in Britain of cold-related diseases every day this winter, according to calculations by Britain’s leading advocacy group for old people, Age UK. “The fact that these ‘excess’ deaths occur in winter makes it clear that they are due directly to cold,” the organisation’s research manager, Philip Rossall, said. “And the fact that other, colder countries have lower excess winter deaths means that there is no reason that they are not preventable.” Age UK’s special adviser for policy, Mervyn Kohler, asked: “Why is this not a national scandal?” There were 26,156 excess winter deaths during 2009-10, with figures for 2010-11 to be published next month. “There is no reason to suppose that the worsening trend will not continue,” said Kohler. The charity’s figure of 200 deaths a day follows sharp price hikes by energy companies, credited with driving inflation to its highest level in 20 years. At the same time, a report by Britain’s leading academic expert on poverty and inequality, Professor John Hills of the London School of Economics, found a deepening “fuel poverty gap” . David Cameron hosted the “big six” energy companies at Downing Street to discuss the impact of soaring heating bills. He later urged consumers to insulate their homes properly and to “shop around” for deals. In his report, Hills found that 2,700 people among the 4.8 million in England and Wales living in fuel poverty (defined as spending more than 10% of income on heat and light) died in the winter of 2008-09 as a direct result – a steady increase for the third year running. But Age UK’s briefing paper makes a distinction between deaths directly due to fuel poverty and what the charity calls “excess winter deaths” – resulting from illnesses caused or exacerbated by cold. “The way to measure the problem is excess winter deaths,” said Rossall. “These are deaths caused by the impact on health of cold. Of course, we see a warning light with a report saying that 2,700 people are dying in fuel poverty. But what we are saying is that this is not the only relevant figure. It doesn’t measure the scale of the problem.” Which is, according to the document, that “among older people, the effects of cold housing were evident in terms of higher mortality risk, physical health and mental health”. Of the 200 a day who die, Rossall said, “more than 90% are over 65, because they are more vulnerable and less able to cope with winter”. The briefing paper reported: “Deaths from hypothermia are rare, but cold weather and poor heating can contribute to deaths caused by circulatory diseases (responsible for 41% of all recorded deaths by natural causes) and by respiratory diseases (13%).” It continued: “Heart and circulatory diseases are the largest causes of mortality in adults over 65 (England and Wales), and are particularly affected by winter temperatures.” Diet can be affected, said Rossall, as elderly people are obliged to make a choice between heat and food. Kohler added: “Cold is the difference. And unless cold is prevented, the deaths will rise.” The only way to prevent this, he said, was to stay warm, “and obviously if you increase the price, you ration the heat.” The report sets the UK’s appalling record in a European context: “Most dramatically, the UK has a higher rate of ‘excess winter deaths’ than other countries with colder climates.” It added: “From 1997-98, on average 18% of the UK’s winter deaths were excess, compared to the 10-12% in typically colder countries such as Finland, Sweden and Norway.” The figure for Germany and the Netherlands was 11%. “Sweden, Germany, Finland – these are the countries to emulate,” said Kohler. “Partly because local government is organised in a way that is more powerful and civic in its awareness of the impact of cold, and housing stock is very much better built and insulated. Although energy prices per unit are 50% higher in Sweden than in the UK, the average bill is 30% lower.” Regulation of tenancy was tighter in those countries, said Rossall, especially in the private rental sector – “and that is where the biggest problem is”. “The cost of heating an adequately sized house is estimated to be £1,300 a year,” said Kohler. “So if you are on pension credit of £7,000, you are very fuel-poor indeed.” He added that the prime minister’s recommendation for consumers to shop around was “inappropriate for many elderly people – it presumes either internet access people don’t have and hours waiting on the phone for people who cannot be understood”. Rossall added: “We are talking about people who become confused, people with dementia, vulnerable people.” “Most of our elderly people now live in poverty,” said Kohler, and one in six of the British population is now an elderly person living alone. Older people Poverty Social exclusion Energy industry Energy bills Ed Vulliamy guardian.co.uk

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Cold homes will kill up to 200 older people a day, warns Age UK

Rising energy bills will put millions at risk from ‘fuel poverty gap’ Two hundred people, most of them elderly, will die in Britain of cold-related diseases every day this winter, according to calculations by Britain’s leading advocacy group for old people, Age UK. “The fact that these ‘excess’ deaths occur in winter makes it clear that they are due directly to cold,” the organisation’s research manager, Philip Rossall, said. “And the fact that other, colder countries have lower excess winter deaths means that there is no reason that they are not preventable.” Age UK’s special adviser for policy, Mervyn Kohler, asked: “Why is this not a national scandal?” There were 26,156 excess winter deaths during 2009-10, with figures for 2010-11 to be published next month. “There is no reason to suppose that the worsening trend will not continue,” said Kohler. The charity’s figure of 200 deaths a day follows sharp price hikes by energy companies, credited with driving inflation to its highest level in 20 years. At the same time, a report by Britain’s leading academic expert on poverty and inequality, Professor John Hills of the London School of Economics, found a deepening “fuel poverty gap” . David Cameron hosted the “big six” energy companies at Downing Street to discuss the impact of soaring heating bills. He later urged consumers to insulate their homes properly and to “shop around” for deals. In his report, Hills found that 2,700 people among the 4.8 million in England and Wales living in fuel poverty (defined as spending more than 10% of income on heat and light) died in the winter of 2008-09 as a direct result – a steady increase for the third year running. But Age UK’s briefing paper makes a distinction between deaths directly due to fuel poverty and what the charity calls “excess winter deaths” – resulting from illnesses caused or exacerbated by cold. “The way to measure the problem is excess winter deaths,” said Rossall. “These are deaths caused by the impact on health of cold. Of course, we see a warning light with a report saying that 2,700 people are dying in fuel poverty. But what we are saying is that this is not the only relevant figure. It doesn’t measure the scale of the problem.” Which is, according to the document, that “among older people, the effects of cold housing were evident in terms of higher mortality risk, physical health and mental health”. Of the 200 a day who die, Rossall said, “more than 90% are over 65, because they are more vulnerable and less able to cope with winter”. The briefing paper reported: “Deaths from hypothermia are rare, but cold weather and poor heating can contribute to deaths caused by circulatory diseases (responsible for 41% of all recorded deaths by natural causes) and by respiratory diseases (13%).” It continued: “Heart and circulatory diseases are the largest causes of mortality in adults over 65 (England and Wales), and are particularly affected by winter temperatures.” Diet can be affected, said Rossall, as elderly people are obliged to make a choice between heat and food. Kohler added: “Cold is the difference. And unless cold is prevented, the deaths will rise.” The only way to prevent this, he said, was to stay warm, “and obviously if you increase the price, you ration the heat.” The report sets the UK’s appalling record in a European context: “Most dramatically, the UK has a higher rate of ‘excess winter deaths’ than other countries with colder climates.” It added: “From 1997-98, on average 18% of the UK’s winter deaths were excess, compared to the 10-12% in typically colder countries such as Finland, Sweden and Norway.” The figure for Germany and the Netherlands was 11%. “Sweden, Germany, Finland – these are the countries to emulate,” said Kohler. “Partly because local government is organised in a way that is more powerful and civic in its awareness of the impact of cold, and housing stock is very much better built and insulated. Although energy prices per unit are 50% higher in Sweden than in the UK, the average bill is 30% lower.” Regulation of tenancy was tighter in those countries, said Rossall, especially in the private rental sector – “and that is where the biggest problem is”. “The cost of heating an adequately sized house is estimated to be £1,300 a year,” said Kohler. “So if you are on pension credit of £7,000, you are very fuel-poor indeed.” He added that the prime minister’s recommendation for consumers to shop around was “inappropriate for many elderly people – it presumes either internet access people don’t have and hours waiting on the phone for people who cannot be understood”. Rossall added: “We are talking about people who become confused, people with dementia, vulnerable people.” “Most of our elderly people now live in poverty,” said Kohler, and one in six of the British population is now an elderly person living alone. Older people Poverty Social exclusion Energy industry Energy bills Ed Vulliamy guardian.co.uk

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Population of world ‘could grow to 15bn by 2100′

Nearly 7 billion people now inhabit planet but projections that number will double this century have shocked academics The United Nations will warn this week that the world’s population could more than double to 15 billion by the end of this century, putting a catastrophic strain on the planet’s resources unless urgent action is taken to curb growth rates, the Observer can reveal. That figure is likely to shock many experts as it is far higher than many current estimates. A previous UN estimate had expected the world to have more than 10 billion people by 2100; currently, there are nearly 7 billion. The new figure is contained in a landmark study by the United Nations Population Fund (Unfpa) that will be released this week. The report – The State of World Population 2011 – is being compiled to mark the expected moment this month when somewhere on Earth a person will be born who will

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Population of world ‘could grow to 15bn by 2100′

Nearly 7 billion people now inhabit planet but projections that number will double this century have shocked academics The United Nations will warn this week that the world’s population could more than double to 15 billion by the end of this century, putting a catastrophic strain on the planet’s resources unless urgent action is taken to curb growth rates, the Observer can reveal. That figure is likely to shock many experts as it is far higher than many current estimates. A previous UN estimate had expected the world to have more than 10 billion people by 2100; currently, there are nearly 7 billion. The new figure is contained in a landmark study by the United Nations Population Fund (Unfpa) that will be released this week. The report – The State of World Population 2011 – is being compiled to mark the expected moment this month when somewhere on Earth a person will be born who will

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This could be a big night for the Republican candidates, notes the Des Moines Register : A major evangelical forum takes place in Des Moines, which might prove pivotal in getting Christian conservatives to rally behind a single candidate. As the Los Angeles Times explains, the political calculus in Iowa is…

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Libya’s new leaders say they will declare liberation tomorrow, a move that will start the clock for elections after months of bloodshed that culminated in the death of Moammar Gadhafi. The National Transitional Council is expected to hold elections for a constitutional assembly within eight months, then organize parliamentary and…

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Australia may have a shark partial to humans on its hands: A great white killed a 32-year-old American diver today just 11 miles from where another fatal attack occurred 12 days ago, reports AP . The unidentified American, in the country on a work visa, was killed by the 10-foot shark…

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Alex Salmond: Scottish people will set the agenda on their own future

SNP leader tells annual conference ‘the sovereign people of Scotland are now in the driving seat’ Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish Nationalists, says his party’s electoral victories have put the “Scottish people” in the driving seat, but admits a future referendum ballot paper may offer options other than independence. Salmond used his speech to the SNP annual conference in Inverness to claim that his party’s landslide victory in the Holyrood elections ensured that “no London politician” would determine the future of Scotland. He also declared that the SNP would campaign for full independence when the referendum he has promised arrives. However, the country’s first minister did not set a detailed timetable for a referendum on Scotland’s withdrawal from the UK, in a sign that the party still lacks confidence that voters support his aspirations. And, while claiming “it was not enough”, he said that a ballot paper question on whether more powers should be transferred to the parliament at Holyrood may be included as an option in the referendum vote. “Fiscal responsibility, financial freedom, real economic powers is a legitimate proposal”, he said. “It could allow control of our own resources, competitive business tax and fair personal taxation.” The conference is the SNP’s first since the party’s victory in May’s elections, when the Nationalists became the first party to secure an overall majority in the Scottish parliament. Salmond said: “The days of Westminster politicians telling Scotland what to do or think are over. The Scottish people will set the agenda for the future. No politician, and certainly no London politician, will determine the future of the Scottish nation. The people of Scotland – the sovereign people of Scotland – are now in the driving seat.” The SNP’s election victory means a referendum will be held on Scottish independence. While no date for such a vote has yet been set, Nationalists have said it will take place in the second half of the Scottish Parliament’s five-year term. Salmond’s speech marked the start of the SNP’s campaign ahead of that referendum, as he told activists: “This party will campaign full square for independence in the coming referendum.” Last month his style came under attack from Labour’s outgoing leader, Iain Gray, during the Scottish Labour party’s conference. Gray told his party the Scottish Parliament “was never meant to be an arena for constant constitutional grievance – a platform for posturing, preening and insufferable pomposity”. Scottish National party (SNP) Alex Salmond Scottish independence Scottish politics Scotland Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Alex Salmond: Scottish people will set the agenda on their own future

SNP leader tells annual conference ‘the sovereign people of Scotland are now in the driving seat’ Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish Nationalists, says his party’s electoral victories have put the “Scottish people” in the driving seat, but admits a future referendum ballot paper may offer options other than independence. Salmond used his speech to the SNP annual conference in Inverness to claim that his party’s landslide victory in the Holyrood elections ensured that “no London politician” would determine the future of Scotland. He also declared that the SNP would campaign for full independence when the referendum he has promised arrives. However, the country’s first minister did not set a detailed timetable for a referendum on Scotland’s withdrawal from the UK, in a sign that the party still lacks confidence that voters support his aspirations. And, while claiming “it was not enough”, he said that a ballot paper question on whether more powers should be transferred to the parliament at Holyrood may be included as an option in the referendum vote. “Fiscal responsibility, financial freedom, real economic powers is a legitimate proposal”, he said. “It could allow control of our own resources, competitive business tax and fair personal taxation.” The conference is the SNP’s first since the party’s victory in May’s elections, when the Nationalists became the first party to secure an overall majority in the Scottish parliament. Salmond said: “The days of Westminster politicians telling Scotland what to do or think are over. The Scottish people will set the agenda for the future. No politician, and certainly no London politician, will determine the future of the Scottish nation. The people of Scotland – the sovereign people of Scotland – are now in the driving seat.” The SNP’s election victory means a referendum will be held on Scottish independence. While no date for such a vote has yet been set, Nationalists have said it will take place in the second half of the Scottish Parliament’s five-year term. Salmond’s speech marked the start of the SNP’s campaign ahead of that referendum, as he told activists: “This party will campaign full square for independence in the coming referendum.” Last month his style came under attack from Labour’s outgoing leader, Iain Gray, during the Scottish Labour party’s conference. Gray told his party the Scottish Parliament “was never meant to be an arena for constant constitutional grievance – a platform for posturing, preening and insufferable pomposity”. Scottish National party (SNP) Alex Salmond Scottish independence Scottish politics Scotland Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Second Occupy London camp forms at Finsbury Square

Protesters call ‘general assembly’ at site in Moorgate and declare it a second occupation after St Paul’s A second Occupy London protest camp has sprung up in a sign that campaigners are spreading from St

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