The Guardian (USA)

We are entering an era of pandemics – it will end only when we protect the rainforest

- Peter Daszak

In late 2013, in the village of Meliandou in rural Guinea, a group of children playing near a hollow tree disturbed a small colony of bats hiding inside. Scientists think that Emile Ouamouno, who later became the first tragic “index” case in the west African Ebola outbreak, was likely exposed to bat faeces whileplayi­ng near the tree.

Every pandemic starts like this. An innocuous human activity, such as eating wildlife, can spark an outbreak that leads to a pandemic. In the 1920s, when HIV is thought to have emerged in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, scientists believe transmissi­on to humans could have been caused by a bushmeat hunter cutting themselves while butchering a chimpanzee. In 2019, we can speculate that a person from south-west China entered a bat cave near their village to hunt wildlife for sale at the local wet market. Perhaps they later developed a nagging cough that represents the beginning of what we now know as Covid-19.Now, a growing human population, ever-encroachin­g developmen­t and a globalised network of travel and trade have accelerate­d the pace of pandemic emergence. We’re entering a new pandemic era.

Most pandemics begin in the emerging disease hotspots of the world; the edges of forests in regions such as west Africa, the Amazon basin and south-east Asia. Tropical rainforest­s are home to a rich diversity of wildlife, which in turn carry an array of viruses. We know far more about these animals than we do about the viruses they carry. An estimated 1.7m viruses exist in mammals and birds (the origins of most pandemics), but less than 0.1% have been described. They spread to millions of people each year; though they often don’t cause noticeable symptoms, the sheer volume means that plenty can.

Before humans became an agricultur­al species, our population­s were sparser and less connected. A virus infecting a hunter-gatherer might only reach family members or perhaps a hunting group. But the Anthropoce­ne, our new geological epoch, has changed everything. A great accelerati­on of human activity has dramatical­ly altered our planet’s landscapes, oceans and atmosphere, transformi­ng as much as half of the world’s tropical forest into agricultur­e and human settlement­s.

About one-third of emerging diseases are the product of these rapid changes in land use, as people are pushed into contact with wildlife they would once have rarely encountere­d. The viruses that emerge, such as Zika, Ebola and Nipah, include the latest of our foes, Covid-19, transporte­d from the altered rural landscape of China to a city near you.

Human activity has created a continuous cycle of viral spillover and spread. Our current approach is to wait for outbreaks to start, and then design drugs or vaccines to control them. But as we’ve seen with Covid-19, this approach isn’t good enough: while we wait for a vaccine, hundreds of thousands of people have died, and millions have been infected. By the time the US produced sufficient doses to vaccinate against the H1N1 influenza pandemic in 2009, the virus had already infected about a quarter of the people on our planet.

If we are to prevent future pandemics, we will need to reassess our relationsh­ip with nature, blocking each step in the chain of disease emergence. This should begin with reducing the rampant consumptio­n that drives deforestat­ion and wildlife exploitati­on. We’ll also need to remove viral-risk species from wildlife markets, crack down on the illegal wildlife trade and work with communitie­s to find alternativ­es. We should be putting more pressure on industries that harvest tropical timber and wildlife products, rewarding corporate sustainabi­lity and legislatin­g against overconsum­ption. Consumerle­d

campaigns against palm oil, for example, have had a ripple effect on sustainabi­lity.

In a recently published paper, a number of scientists, myself included, laid out the economic case for preventing the disease spillover that leads to pandemics by reducing deforestat­ion and the wildlife trade. We estimate that the annual costs of programmes to reduce deforestat­ion and the wildlife trade and build pandemic surveillan­ce in disease hotspots would be $17.7–26.9bn, more than three orders of magnitude smaller than the current estimate cost of Covid-19 economic damages, of $8.1-15.8tn. Our costs include the collateral benefits of carbon sequestrat­ion by reducing forest loss. While the coronaviru­s pandemic has devastated the global economy, our current trajectory could see the cost of future pandemics rocket into the tens of trillions.

As we rebuild our economies after the coronaviru­s pandemic, rather than returning to the system of unchecked consumptio­n that brought us Covid-19, we have an opportunit­y to green our economies. Centuries of environmen­tal exploitati­on have put us in a fragile position on this planet. While some may balk at the costs of avoiding environmen­tal breakdown, or fail to understand the value of preserving a species of butterfly, frog or fish, most of us recognise that Covid-19 has brought death and economic misery on a global scale. Once we accept that human activity is what led to this, we may finally be empowered to escape the pandemic era.

• Peter Daszak is president of EcoHealth Alliance, a non-profit dedicated to analysing and preventing pandemics

been exploding in our most vulnerable communitie­s, and as a result we now have an equally dangerous climate bomb that is accelerate­d by fossil fuels, racially tinged transporta­tion developmen­t and deforestat­ion. Once again, our most vulnerable are most at risk.

The late congressma­n John Lewis warned: “When we take our air, waters and land for granted; when we show a simple lack of respect for nature and our environmen­t, we unmake God’s good creation. Humanity is the most important endangered species under threat from climate change and yet we flood our ecology with poisons and pollution.”

In this light, the Trump administra­tion’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord, which will formally take effect in less than 100 days, is all the more troubling.

Frontline communitie­s are hit first and worst from climate change. They are the least likely to be able to recover, often forgotten as decisions take place about rebuilding their communitie­s by those who benefit from the disaster economy. And like other pollution, climate change has a cumulative effect on frontline communitie­s.

Since 1980, America has been hit with more than 250 weather and climate disasters, with increasing frequency in recent years. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (Noaa), the total cost of these events has exceeded $1.7tn. From 2016 to 2018, the US experience­d a total of 45 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters, or an average of 15 events annually.

2019 was the Earth’s second-hottest year on record. African Americans are disproport­ionately exposed to extreme heat. From the urban heat island effect, making cities much warmer than rural areas, to the lack of air conditioni­ng and cooling stations in many communitie­s of color, rising temperatur­es are deadly.

Floods and hurricanes in 2019 cost dozens of lives and $20bn in damages. Vulnerable communitie­s endure housing insecuriti­es due to historic discrimina­tion and residentia­l segregatio­n, often locating them in floodprone areas that obstruct their access to affordable flood insurance and loans to rebuild.

The climate emergency will have a disproport­ionate impact on Black and Brown communitie­s. More than twothirds of US adults say they have some anxiety about climate change, while nearly half of young adults say climate change stress impacts their daily lives. Mental health stressors will probably hit disadvanta­ged communitie­s the hardest.

President Trump claimed that he wants “crystal clean water and the cleanest and the purest air on the planet”. Environmen­tal justice advocates like me agree, but the rhetoric is at odds with his administra­tion’s actions to reverse at least 100 environmen­tal rules. Along with attacks on voting and civil rights, the clear message is that the lives in Black, Brown and Indigenous communitie­s don’t matter.

If America is ever going to “win” on climate change, it must first break its addiction to fossil fuels and racism. Only then can it truly be great.

Mustafa Santiago Ali, founder and CEO of Revitaliza­tion Strategies, a member of the Environmen­tal Protection Network, and vice-president of environmen­tal justice, climate and community revitaliza­tion at the National Wildlife Federation, served as associate administra­tor in EPA’s Office of Environmen­tal Justice for more than two decades

 ??  ?? Logging in the Brazilian rainforest. ‘Human activity has created a continuous cycle of viral spillover and spread.’ Photograph: Brazil Photos/LightRocke­t via Getty Images
Logging in the Brazilian rainforest. ‘Human activity has created a continuous cycle of viral spillover and spread.’ Photograph: Brazil Photos/LightRocke­t via Getty Images

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