
Katie Woolaston, Queensland University of Technology and Judith Lorraine Fisher
Human damage to biodiversity is leading us into a pandemic era. The virus that causes COVID-19, for example, is linked to similar viruses in bats, which may have been passed to humans via pangolins or another species.
Environmental destruction such as land clearing, deforestation, climate change, intense agriculture and the wildlife trade is putting humans into closer contact with wildlife. Animals carry microbes that can be transferred to people during these encounters.
A major report released today says up to 850,000 undiscovered viruses which could be transferred to humans are thought to exist in mammal and avian hosts.
The report, by The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), says to avoid future pandemics, humans must urgently transform our relationship with the environment.

Humans costs are mounting
The report is the result of a week-long virtual workshop in July this year, attended by leading experts. It says a review of scientific evidence shows:
…pandemics are becoming more frequent, driven by a continued rise in the underlying emerging disease events that spark them. Without preventative strategies, pandemics will emerge more often, spread more rapidly, kill more people, and affect the global economy with more devastating impact than ever before.
The report says, on average, five new diseases are transferred from animals to humans every year – all with pandemic potential. In the past century, these have included:
- the Ebola virus (from fruit bats),
- AIDS (from chimpazees)
- Lyme disease (from ticks)
- the Hendra virus (which first erupted at a Brisbane racing stable in 1994).
The report says an estimated 1.7 million currently undiscovered viruses are thought to exist in mammal and avian hosts. Of these, 540,000-850,000 could infect humans.
But rather than prioritising the prevention of pandemic outbreaks, governments around the world primarily focus on responding – through early detection, containment and hope for rapid development of vaccines and medicines.

As the report states, COVID-19 demonstrates:
…this is a slow and uncertain path, and as the global population waits for vaccines to become available, the human costs are mounting, in lives lost, sickness endured, economic collapse, and lost livelihoods.
This approach can also damage biodiversity – for example, leading to large culls of identified carrier-species. Tens of thousands of wild animals were culled in China after the SARS outbreak and bats continue to be persecuted after the onset of COVID-19.
The report says women and Indigenous communities are particularly disadvantaged by pandemics. Women represent more then 70% of social and health-care workers globally, and past pandemics have disproportionately harmed indigenous people, often due to geographical isolation.
Read more: The next global health pandemic could easily erupt in your backyard
It says pandemics and other emerging zoonoses (diseases that have jumped from animals to humans) likely cause more than US$1 trillion in economic damages annually. As of July 2020, the cost of COVID-19 was estimated at US $8-16 trillion globally. The costs of preventing the next pandemic are likely to be 100 times less than that.

A way forward
The IPBES report identifies potential ways forward. These include:
• increased intergovernmental cooperation, such as a council on pandemic prevention, that could lead to a binding international agreement on targets for pandemic prevention measures
• global implementation of OneHealth policies – policies on human health, animal health and the environment which are integrated, rather than “siloed” and considered in isolation
• a reduction in land-use change, by expanding protected areas, restoring habitat and implementing financial disincentives such as taxes on meat consumption
• policies to reduce wildlife trade and the risks associated with it, such as increasing sanitation and safety in wild animal markets, increased biosecurity measures and enhanced enforcement around illegal trade.
Societal and individual behaviour change will also be needed. Exponential growth in consumption, often driven by developed countries, has led to the repeated emergence of diseases from less-developed countries where the commodities are produced.
So how do we bring about social change that can reduce consumption? Measures proposed in the report include:
- education policies
- labelling high pandemic-risk consumption patterns, such as captive wildlife for sale as pets as either “wild-caught” or “captive-bred” with information on the country where it was bred or captured
- providing incentives for sustainable behaviour
- increasing food security to reduce the need for wildlife consumption.

An Australian response
Australia was one of the founding member countries of IPBES in 2012 and so has made an informal, non-binding commitment to follow its science and policy evidence.
However, there are no guarantees it will accept the recommendations of the IPBES report, given the Australian government’s underwhelming recent record on environmental policy.
For example, in recent months the government has so far refused to sign the Leaders’ Pledge for Nature. The pledge, instigated by the UN, includes a commitment to taking a OneHealth approach – which considers health and environmental sustainability together – when devising policies and making decisions.
The government cut funding of environmental studies courses by 30%. It has sought to reduce so called “green tape” in national environmental legislation, and its economic response to the pandemic will be led by industry and mining – a focus that creates further pandemic potential.
Read more: New polling shows 79% of Aussies care about climate change. So why doesn’t the government listen?
Finally, Australia is one of few countries without a national centre for disease control and pandemics.
But there are good reasons for hope. It’s within Australia’s means to build an organisation focused on a OneHealth approach. Australia is one of the most biologically diverse countries on the planet and Australians are willing to protect it. Further, many investors believe proper environmental policy will aid Australia’s economic recovery.
Finally, we have countless passionate experts and traditional owners willing to do the hard work around policy design and implementation.
As this new report demonstrates, we know the origins of pandemics, and this gives us the power to prevent them.
Katie Woolaston, Lawyer, Queensland University of Technology and Judith Lorraine Fisher, Adjunct Professor University of Western Australia, Institute of Agriculture
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Wow. The Pandemicocene. Or should that be the Pandemonium? What next, the Anthropodemicocene?
“Environmental destruction such as … climate change, … is putting humans into closer contact with wildlife.”
Indeed, due to climate change, it often rains cats and pangolins.
Pangolin make a lousy house pet!
More victimhood for womyn and indigenes from ugh! civilization. They need to be turned out into the wilderness for their own good.
Thankfully, UN satraps in urban highrises with caviar dispensers in their limousines have recognized the horrors of ugh! civilization and are johnny-on-the-spot with recommendations for the Fourth (or is it the Fifth?) World. No more cutting trees, more mud huts, eliminate agriculture, eliminate “trade” and other economic foofrah, force humans to starve while huddling in the cold and dark, and the Planet will be saved. Hooray for our saviors, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). What would we do without them?
Note to Google, Twitter, and Facebook: have you fact checked these bozos? Would you please censor and/or cancel them.
But according to Google, etc., the “bozos” are the one and only true Source of “facts”.
we had one of our vocal “first nations”( yeah last i remember that was USA native indian peoples not Aussie aboriginals..).claiming that SARS had hurt their people massively
so i looked it up very few cases a few deaths and NOT ONE was aboriginal
but gee her impassione specch sure got media play by abc our socialist communist agitprop govvy funded scam centre
How about if humans spent some time developing a more robust immune system. Maybe pandemics would become less of an issue.
Up to 850,000 undiscovered planets in our galaxy that have intelligent life (Republicans) using nuclear power for Everything!
What we have here is an article about a UN report.
You know that telephone game … by the time the message gets all the way around the circle it is unrecognisable. Other than the premise and most of the facts, there’s something about the article that feels wrong. I can’t put my finger on it but I have the feeling that the authors have somehow distorted the original.
“Environmental destruction such as land clearing, deforestation, climate change, intense agriculture and the wildlife trade is putting humans into closer contact with wildlife.”
Thankfully, the science says clear-cutting millions of acres of trees for solar farms cannot negatively affect animals at all and thus does not put us closer to them in nature. But cutting down one tree for a fracking well releases a super-duper coronavirus that will only 99.8% of people will survive. Therefore, if you support fracking, you automatically want grandma to die. Clearly, people who support fracking are worse than Hitler. It is science, after all. Who are you to argue with science, grandma killer?
The UN has strayed far from its’ original mission of preventing wars and no one seems to be checking them. No wonder they espouse the One World Government mantra with themselves as the leader.
Isn’t it amazing how every threatening thing in the world has the same solution – progressivism? What a remarkable coincidence!
That sounds like a call to destroy as many animals as possible to get rid of those diseases.
The “political” science is in and irrefutable. We must follow this political science.
Alarmism has captured every university and is such an inconvenient truth.
“Up to 1.7 million: current estimate of ‘undiscovered’ viruses in mammal and water birds, the hosts most commonly identified as origins of novel zoonoses” (hint: but mostly bats)
Just give us your money and we can save you ….
But according to Google, etc., the “bozos” are the one and only true Source of “facts”.
There are what line 7 or 8 billion people on planet ? With such large numbers just by pure chance people will have contact with animals ( like bats ). Do to the sheer size of those numbers it is unavoidable!!! People have no grasp of probability numbers. Combine this with international travel and well it is guaranteed viruses will jump the species barrier and spread quickly around the world. The main defense is technological advancement in cures and vaccines. This idea of somehow managing the barriers between human and animals is ridiculous with 7 to 8 billion people ! Of course risk can be reduced but it will not be even close to eliminated. We already have had sars, MERS, Covid. New diseases will come, it is a mathematical certainty.
We destroy nature at our own peril
If viruses cannot use wildlife as hosts, we will become the hosts.
The next plague will be worse, and the next still worse.
https://youtu.be/cVBppz64n_A
Let’s kill the jungle before it kills us!
“So how do we bring about social change that can reduce consumption?”
See, they’re smarter this time. Before, the communism was to bring success in next 50 years, and give everyone as much as they wanted, according to their needs, for nothing. Now as everyone knows it’s stupid and impossible, people won’t believe it so they need to be scared into accepting communism with pandemics.
And communism is ultimate totalitarianism – you own nothing, you are nothing, state owns everything, state is everything, you defy the state, you die. Of course, all the excess consumption taken from the masses will be looked over by trusted individuals with impeccable ideological allegiance. After all, Bill Gates says he can fly a private jet plane because no one does more to combat climate change than he.
Yes, he actually said that.
There is exactly one BSL4 laboratory in China doing gain of function research. Of the millions of cities, towns and villages on earth, a contagious, deadly virus emerges. What do these have in common? Wuhan. I don’t buy for a second that this was an entirely spontaneous epidemic, or that someone caught this virus from a Wuhan market. The only question is whether the Chicoms did this as an act of biowarfare or accidentally.
Or an happy lab accident that was turned into warfare.
Incompetence and sloppiness is common. Then they suffered from it, then profited from it.
Meanwhile, Remdesivir does not work but is still being supported for use?
” …. large clinical trial supported by … WHO announced on October 15, showing that remdesivir does not reduce the mortality or the time COVID-19 patients who are administered the drug take to recover.”
” … ‘This is a very, very bad look for the FDA, and the dealings between Gilead and EU make it another layer of badness,’ Eric Topol, a cardiologist who objected to remdesivir getting the FDA’s approval, told Science.”
We still have zero idea what the origin of the so called corona “pandemic” is, and they are speculating about other viruses?
Even if the origin of AIDS is not a vaccine in Africa in that universe and neither is the origin of the corona a lab in Wuhan (and perhaps not the French one), in other universe that clearly happened, because it’s at least vaguely plausible in ours.
using green monkey kidney tissue in the HepB vaccine the promoted heavily to the gay pop was the likeliest source for AIDS/HIV as Ive read inmore than one souce over the yrs
the Reston Ebola scare was also from phillipines green monkeys
“UN report says up to 850,000 animal viruses could be caught by humans, unless we protect nature”
How about we protect people instead?
I am all for nature preserves and places we protect for humans to experience the wild, but you cannot protect humans from viruses by protesting nature – that is just stupid.
In 20 years we will be able to produce radical new vaccines very quickly, and THAT is where we should invest money. That and mass production within friendly borders (i.e. NOT China). The U.S. has no excuses to not have all the medical infrastructure needed to produce any and all drugs it requires. All that prevents us from this is stupidity, greed, and short shortsightedness. This stupidity needs to end.
Well that has really spooked me out (maybe it’s Halloween) I was fine with life’s challenges right up to 849,999 infectious threats, those I have come to accept as part of the living risk, but to imagine, (did I say imagine?) there are the full 850,000 pathogens just waiting to get me, that is just too much. 🙂
The madness of crowds, plus the political manipulation of fear, is where the real risks are to be found.
Isn’t hooman some sort of animal?
In Asia animal husbandry conditions are so bad that viruses get out of control and leap species.
The Wuhan virus though was intentionally collected from bats in a cave by Siu Jenghli, and has nothing to do with farming.
Swine flu and the 1918 flu were from pigs in Texas and Mexico. Pig farms.
None of this is due to habitat loss. This report is yet another thinly disguised attempt to implement Agenda21.
Am wondering, how does one “persecute” bats? I wasn’t aware that bat beliefs are objectionable … ah well, I suppose we should stop in the name of bat equality and justice … persecution only ever makes the faithful even more confident.
Twat them with a giant composite blade.
That’ll learn ’em…
The moronovirus is spreading widely.
Nasty cluster of infection at the UN.