Leading Biodiversity Experts Warn The World Will Witness More Deadly Pandemics If Human-Made Destructions of Nature Continue

No other species, but humans are responsible for the coronavirus pandemic. And now more deadly and destructive disease outbreaks are likely to be followed unless their root cause, the rampant destruction of the natural world, is halted immediately, warned the world’s top biodiversity experts.

“There is a single species responsible for the Covid-19 pandemic – us,” they said. “Recent pandemics are a direct consequence of human activity, particularly our global financial and economic systems that prize economic growth at any cost. We have a small window of opportunity, in overcoming the challenges of the current crisis, to avoid sowing the seeds of future ones.”

Professors Josef Settele, Sandra Díaz, and Eduardo Brondizio led the first-ever most comprehensive planetary health check undertaken, which was published in 2019 by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). The report concluded that human society was in jeopardy from the escalating decline of the Earth’s natural life-support systems.

In an article published on Monday, with Dr Peter Daszak, who is preparing the next IPBES assessment, they write: “Rampant deforestation, uncontrolled expansion of agriculture, intensive farming, mining and infrastructure development, as well as the exploitation of wild species have created a ‘perfect storm’ for the spillover of diseases.”

These activities bring more people into contact and conflict with animals, from which 70% of emerging human diseases originate and lead to pandemics, they said. The urbanization, combined with the explosive growth of global air travel, enabled a harmless virus in Asian bats to bring “untold human suffering and halt economies and societies around the world. This is the human hand in pandemic emergence. Yet [Covid-19] may be only the beginning.”

“Future pandemics are likely to happen more frequently, spread more rapidly, have greater economic impact and kill more people if we are not extremely careful about the possible impacts of the choices we make today,” they said.

According to the scientists, the multitrillion-dollar economic recovery packages that governments have rolled out should be utilized to strengthen and enforce environmental protection: “It may be politically expedient to relax environmental standards and to prop up industries such as intensive agriculture, airlines, and fossil-fuel-dependent energy sectors, but doing so without requiring urgent and fundamental change essentially subsidises the emergence of future pandemics.”

A global “One Health” approach must also be expanded, they said. “The health of people is intimately connected to the health of wildlife, the health of livestock and the health of the environment. It’s actually one health,” said Daszak.

In nations that are on the frontlines of pandemic risk, surveillance programs and health services need to be adequately funded; they said: “This is not simple altruism – it is vital investment in the interests of all to prevent future global outbreaks.”

Daszak said: “The programs we’re talking about will cost tens of billions of dollars a year. But if you get one pandemic, even just one a century, that costs trillions, so you still come out with an incredibly good return on investment.

“Business as usual will not work. Business as usual right now for pandemics is waiting for them to emerge and hoping for a vaccine. That’s not a good strategy. We need to deal with the underlying drivers.”

In March, the UN’s environment chief, Inger Andersen, says, with the coronavirus pandemic and the continuous climate crisis -‘Nature is sending us a message.’ She warned that our failure to take care of the planet meant our inability to take care of ourselves. Covid-19 is a ‘clear warning shot,’ and the climate crisis is now hurting humanity, say leading scientists.

Last week, the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, said governments must seize the opportunity to “build back better” after the pandemic by building more sustainable and resilient societies.

Prof Thomas Lovejoy, who coined the term “biological diversity” in 1980, at the United Nations Foundation and George Mason University in the US, said on Saturday: “[The pandemic] is not nature’s revenge; we did it to ourselves.”

“It is the consequence of our persistent and excessive intrusion in nature and the vast illegal wildlife trade, and in particular the wildlife markets, the wet markets, of south Asia and bush meat markets of Africa,” he said. Earlier in April, a major study disclosed that the human impact on wildlife was to blame for the spread of viruses.

In the new article, the biodiversity experts said: “We can emerge from the current crisis stronger and more resilient than ever, [by] choosing actions that protect nature, so that nature can help to protect us.”

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About Arindom Ghosh

A professional writer, editor, blogger, copywriter, and a member of the International Association of Professional Writers and Editors, New York. He has been part of many reputed domestic and global online magazines and publications. An avid reader and a nature lover by heart, when he is not working, he is probably exploring the secrets of life.