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Public Health Risk Reduction And Sustainable Energy Transition As Twin Pathways To Long-Term Human Well-Being: An Integrative Analysis Of Smoking, Alcohol Use, And Renewable Development

4 Department of Public Policy and Sustainability, University of Lyon, France

Abstract

This article develops an integrative research synthesis that treats two issues often discussed in separate policy arenas—health risk reduction and energy transition—as mutually reinforcing foundations of long-term human well-being. Drawing strictly on the provided references, the study examines how tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and renewable energy development can be understood within one conceptual framework centered on mortality, healthy longevity, environmental degradation, and sustainable development. The smoking literature offers robust evidence that tobacco use is strongly associated with increased all-cause mortality, even in settings where smoking prevalence has declined, demonstrating that mature epidemics continue to generate major population-level harm (Banks et al., 2015; Doll et al., 2004). The alcohol literature presents a more complex picture, showing that the measurement of alcohol intake substantially affects interpretation, while longitudinal evidence among older adults indicates that changes in alcohol use are linked to health status and cognitively healthy longevity in ways that require nuance rather than simplistic assumptions (Heeb & Gmel, 2005; Reid et al., 2003; McEvoy et al., 2013; Richard et al., 2017; World Health Organization, 2024). The energy literature shows that renewable systems are central to sustainable development, environmental protection, localization of energy access, and economic transformation, with significant implications for employment, investment, and ecological resilience (Delucchi & Jacobson, 2013; Kumar & Majid, 2020; Riti & Shu, 2016; Solanki, 2021; IEA, 2024; MNRE, 2024; REN21, 2024). Methodologically, the article uses structured narrative synthesis to align health and energy evidence under a common lens of risk governance and societal sustainability. The findings indicate that reducing preventable harms from smoking and harmful alcohol use improves the human side of development, while expanding renewable energy strengthens the ecological and infrastructural side. The central conclusion is that sustainable development is most coherent when it simultaneously protects bodies, minds, communities, and environments. Public health and clean energy should therefore be treated not as competing agendas but as co-dependent pillars of a humane and future-oriented development model.

Keywords

References

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