Los Angeles Times

COVID lab-leak theory resurfaces in new report

Department of Energy assessment over pandemic’s source brings pushback.

- By Laura Ungar Associated Press writer Ungar reported from Louisville, Ky. AP reporters Farnoush Amiri, Nomaan Merchant and Seung Min Kim contribute­d.

The answer to a crucial question has eluded government­s and health agencies around the world since the COVID-19 pandemic began: Did the virus originate in animals or leak from a Chinese lab?

Now, the U.S. Department of Energy has assessed with “low confidence” that it began with a lab leak, according to a person familiar with the report who wasn’t authorized to discuss it. The report has not been made public.

But others in the U.S. intelligen­ce community disagree.

“There is not a consensus right now in the U.S. government about exactly how COVID started,” John F. Kirby, the spokesman for the National Security Council, said Monday. “There is just not an intelligen­ce community consensus.”

The DOE’s conclusion was first reported over the weekend in the Wall Street Journal, which said the classified report was based on new intelligen­ce and noted in an update to a 2021 document. The DOE oversees a national network of labs.

White House officials on Monday declined to confirm press reports about the assessment.

In 2021, officials released an intelligen­ce report summary that said four members of the U.S. intelligen­ce community believed with low confidence that the virus was first transmitte­d from an animal to a human, and a fifth believed with moderate confidence that the first human infection was linked to a lab.

Although some scientists are open to the lab-leak theory, others continue to believe the virus came from animals, mutated, and jumped to people — as has happened in the past with viruses. Experts say the true origin of the pandemic may not be known for many years — if ever.

The U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce declined to comment on the report. All 18 offices of the U.S. intelligen­ce community had access to the informatio­n the DOE used in reaching its assessment.

Scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China and their collaborat­ors in the United States had been studying coronaviru­ses for years, in part because of widespread concerns — tracing back to the

2003 SARS outbreak — that coronaviru­ses could be the source of the next pandemic.

No intelligen­ce agency has said it believes the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 was released intentiona­lly. The unclassifi­ed 2021 summary was clear on this point, saying: “We judge the virus was not developed as a biological weapon.”

“Lab accidents happen at a surprising frequency. A lot of people don’t really hear about lab accidents because they’re not talked about publicly,” said Alina Chan, a molecular biologist at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard who co-wrote a

book about the search for COVID-19 origins. Such accidents “underscore a need to make work with highly dangerous pathogens more transparen­t and more accountabl­e.”

Last year, the World Health Organizati­on recommende­d a deeper probe into a possible lab accident.

China has called the suggestion that COVID-19 came from a Chinese laboratory “baseless.”

Many scientists believe the animal-to-human theory of the coronaviru­s remains much more plausible. They theorize it emerged in the wild and jumped from

bats to humans, either directly or through another animal.

In a 2021 research paper in the journal Cell, scientists said the COVID-19 virus is the ninth documented coronaviru­s to infect humans — and all of the previous ones originated in animals.

Two studies published last year by the journal Science bolstered the animal origin theory. That research found that the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan was probably the early epicenter. Scientists concluded that the virus probably spilled from animals into people two times.

“The scientific literature contains essentiall­y nothing but original research articles that support a natural origin of this virus pandemic,” said Michael Worobey, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Arizona who has extensivel­y studied COVID-19’s origins.

He said the fact that others in the intelligen­ce community looked at the same informatio­n as the DOE and “it apparently didn’t move the needle speaks volumes.” He said he takes such intelligen­ce assessment­s with a grain of salt because he doesn’t think the people making them “have the scientific expertise ... to really understand the most important evidence that they need to understand.”

The U.S. should be more transparen­t and release the new intelligen­ce that apparently swayed the DOE, Worobey said.

The DOE conclusion comes to light as House Republican­s have been using their new majority power to investigat­e all aspects of the pandemic, including the origin, as well as what they contend were officials’ efforts to conceal the fact that it leaked from a lab in Wuhan. This month, Republican­s sent letters to Dr. Anthony Fauci, National Intelligen­ce Director Avril Haines, Health Secretary Xavier Becerra and others as part of their investigat­ive efforts.

The now-retired Fauci, who served as the country’s top infectious disease expert under both Republican and Democratic presidents, has called the GOP criticism nonsense.

Rep. Michael McCaul (RTexas), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has asked the Biden administra­tion to provide Congress with “a full and thorough” briefing on the report and the evidence behind it.

Kirby, the National Security Council spokesman, emphasized that President Biden believes it’s important to know what happened “so we can better prevent future pandemics” but that such research “must be done in a safe and secure manner and as transparen­t as possible to the rest of the world.”

 ?? Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images ?? SECURITY personnel stand guard outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan as members of the World Health Organizati­on team visit the Chinese lab during an investigat­ion in February 2021.
Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images SECURITY personnel stand guard outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan as members of the World Health Organizati­on team visit the Chinese lab during an investigat­ion in February 2021.

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