Pandemics result from destruction of nature, say UN and WHO
Pandemics such as coronavirus are the result of
humanity’s destruction of nature, according to leaders at the UN, WHO and WWF
International, and the world has been ignoring this stark reality for decades.
The illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade as well
as the devastation of forests and other wild places were still the driving
forces behind the increasing number of diseases leaping from wildlife to
humans, the leaders told the Guardian.
They are calling for a green and healthy recovery
from the Covid-19 pandemic, in particular by reforming destructive farming and
unsustainable diets.
A WWF report, also published on Wednesday, warns:
“The risk of a new [wildlife-to-human] disease emerging in the future is higher
than ever, with the potential to wreak havoc on health, economies and global
security.”
WWF’s head in the UK said post-Brexit trade deals
that fail to protect nature would leave Britain “complicit in increasing the
risk of the next pandemic”.
High-level figures have issued a series of warnings
since March, with the world’s leading biodiversity experts saying even more
deadly disease outbreaks are likely in future unless the rampant destruction of
the natural world is rapidly halted.
Earlier in June, the UN environment chief and a
leading economist said Covid-19 was an “SOS signal for the human enterprise”
and that current economic thinking did not recognise that human wealth depends
on nature’s health.
“We have seen
many diseases emerge over the years, such as Zika, Aids, Sars and Ebola and
they all originated from animal populations under conditions of severe
environmental pressures,” said Elizabeth Maruma Mrema, head of the UN
convention on biological diversity, Maria Neira, the World Health Organization
director for environment and health, and Marco Lambertini, head of WWF
International, in the Guardian article.
With coronavirus, “these outbreaks are
manifestations of our dangerously unbalanced relationship with nature”, they
said. “They all illustrate that our own destructive behaviour towards nature is
endangering our own health – a stark reality we’ve been collectively ignoring
for decades.
“Worryingly, while Covid-19 has given us yet another
reason to protect and preserve nature, we have seen the reverse take place.
From the Greater Mekong, to the Amazon and Madagascar, alarming reports have
emerged of increased poaching, illegal logging and forest fires, while many
countries are engaging in hasty environmental rollbacks and cuts in funding for
conservation. This all comes at a time when we need it most.
“We must embrace a just, healthy and green recovery
and kickstart a wider transformation towards a model that values nature as the
foundation for a healthy society. Not doing so, and instead attempting to save
money by neglecting environmental protection, health systems, and social safety
nets, has already proven to be a false economy. The bill will be paid many
times over.”
A man walks past a poster warning people in
Guangdong province, China, that consuming wildlife is illegal.
The WWF report concludes the key drivers for
diseases that move from wild animals to humans are the destruction of nature,
the intensification of agriculture and livestock production, as well as the
trading and consumption of high-risk wildlife.
The report urges all governments to introduce and
enforce laws to eliminate the destruction of nature from supply chains of goods
and on the public to make their diets more sustainable.
Beef, palm oil and soy are among the commodities
frequently linked to deforestation and scientists have said avoiding meat and
dairy products is the single biggest way for people to reduce their environmental
impact on the planet.
Tanya Steele, the head of WWF UK, said the
post-Brexit trade deals must protect nature: “We cannot be complicit in
increasing the risk of the next pandemic. We need strong legislation and trade
deals that stop us importing food that is the result of rampant deforestation
or whose production ignores poor welfare and environmental standards in
producer countries. The government has a golden opportunity to make
transformative, world-leading change happen.”
The WWF report said 60-70% of the new diseases that
have emerged in humans since 1990 came from wildlife. Over the same period,
178m hectares of forest have been cleared, equivalent to more than seven times
the area of the UK.




