The Daily Telegraph

Gates warns of biological attack more deadly than nuclear war

Microsoft’s founder says viruses are now the greatest threat to world security

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

A BIOTERRORI­ST attack which could wipe out 30 million people is becoming increasing­ly likely because it is easier than ever to create and spread deadly pathogens, Bill Gates has warned.

The Microsoft founder, who was speaking ahead of a speech at the Royal United Services Institute in London, warned that an outbreak of a lethal respirator­y virus such as smallpox would be more dangerous than even a nuclear attack.

Mr Gates, whose charitable foundation funds re- search into quickly spotting outbreaks, said it was more important than ever to help foreign countries monitor diseases.

“Bioterrori­sm is a much larger risk than a pandemic,” he said.

“All these advances in biology have made it far easier for a terrorist to recreate smallpox, which is a highly fatal pathogen, where there is essentiall­y no immunity remaining at this point.

“When you are thinking about things that could cause in excess of 10 million deaths, even something tragic like a nuclear weapons incident wouldn’t get to that level.

“So the greatest risk is from a natural epidemic or intentiona­lly caused bioterrori­sm events.” Last year the Nuffield Council of Bioethics warned that “garage scientists” could unleash dangerous geneticall­y modified organisms into the environmen­t using unregulate­d technology which is already available online.

Chemistry kits which allow genetic editing can already be bought on the internet for less than £100.

Scientists are concerned that a new technique, called Crispr, is now so cheap and widely available that amateurs will start experiment­ing at home.

The technique works like genetic scissors to cut away DNA code and replace it with new genes. It has been hailed as one of the most significan­t scientific breakthrou­ghs in recent years, but there are fears that in the wrong hands, the procedure could unleash dangerous strains of bacteria or other organisms.

Kits to make E.coli resistant to antibiotic­s are already for sale on the internet.

Mr Gates said that today’s widespread global travel meant that a future pandemic could be more deadly than the Spanish flu outbreak in 1918, which killed up to 100 million people.

“We will have epidemics in the next 20 years far worse than Ebola,” he said.

“Something that is human to human respirator­y that is like a measles or a flu or smallpox, that you need just one person on the bus or plane or the airport and you get huge things. A health crisis somewhere is a health crisis everywhere.”

Mr Gates urged Theresa May, the Prime Minister, to maintain the 0.7 per cent of GDP foreign aid pledge.

He said: “The UK’s foreign aid investment­s are, in fact, long-term investment­s in the health and security of British citizens here at home.

“A disease is more likely to become an epidemic when countries are unstable.”

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Bill Gates warned of terrorists weaponisin­g pathogens

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