Coronavirus

Future Pandemics Will Be Deadlier, Frequent Unless Humans Stop Exploiting Nature, Warns UN Panel

By
OB Bureau

New Delhi: Pandemics in the future will be deadlier and frequent if humans do not change the way they treat nature, a United Nations biodiversity panel warned on Thursday.

Pandemics like COVID-19 will happen more often, kill more people and create even more damage to the global economy unless there is a fundamental shift in treating nature with respect, the panel said, reported Zee News.

According to the panel, there are up to 850,000 viruses which, like the novel coronavirus, exist in animals and may infect people. It said pandemics represented an “existential threat” to humanity, the report added.

“There is no great mystery about the cause of the COVID-19 pandemic – or any modern pandemic,” Peter Daszak, president of the Ecohealth Alliance and chair of the panel (also known as IPBES) workshop that drafted the report was quoted as saying by ZeeNews.

The panel said that COVID-19 was the sixth pandemic since the influenza outbreak of 1918 and all of which had been “entirely driven by human activities”.

“The same human activities that drive climate change and biodiversity loss also drive pandemic risk through their impact on our agriculture,” he was quoted as saying.

The animal-pandemic connection

Authors of the special report on biodiversity and pandemics said that the destruction of natural habitat and insatiable consumption has made animal-borne diseases more likely to make the jump to people in the future.

These include unsustainable exploitation of the environment through deforestation, agricultural expansion, wildlife trade and consumption, all of which put humans in increasingly close contact with wild and farmed animals and the diseases they harbour.

At least 70% of the emerging diseases like Ebola, Zika and HIV/AIDS, are zoonotic – meaning they circulate in animals before jumping to humans, the report added.

Around five new diseases break out among humans every single year, any one of which has the potential to become a pandemic, the panel warned, ZeeNews reported.

OB Bureau

Recent Posts

‘Kalki Avatar’ Row In Odisha: GA, BDA Officials Inspect Bhubaneswar Ashram

Bhubaneswar: In the wake of a controversy triggered by reports about a boy being projected…

November 18, 2024

[Watch] Contestant Mocking Deepika Padukone’s Mental Health On Comedy Show Is Not Funny, Say Angry Fans

New Delhi: A contestant appearing to mock actor Deepika Padukone's battle with depression on Samay…

November 18, 2024

Former Odisha Minister & Senior BJP Leader Samir Dey Passes Away At 67

Cuttack: Senior BJP leader and former minister Samir Dey breathed his last on Monday while…

November 18, 2024

Maharashtra Elections: In A Politically Splintered State, Will Independents Be The Game Changer?

Mahayuti vs Maha Vikas Aghadi - it's an electoral Mahabharat in Maharashtra, albeit a lot…

November 18, 2024

No Pressure: AAP’s Kailash Gahlot After Joining BJP; ‘He’s A Free Man,’ Says Kejriwal

New Delhi: Former Delhi minister and senior AAP leader Kailash Gahlot, who resigned from the…

November 18, 2024

Kharagpur-Visakhapatnam Expressway Through Odisha Soon: Minister

Bhubaneswar: A greenfield highway connecting Kharagpur in West Bengal and Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh will…

November 18, 2024

‘Randi Pua Ananta’ Row: Actor Manoj Mishra Seeks Apology From People Of Odisha, Says ‘No Intention To Question Fakir Mohan’

Bhubaneswar: Maintaining his opinion regarding the title of Sabyasachi Mohapatra’s upcoming film, ‘Randi Pua Ananta’— based…

November 18, 2024

Owner, Manager Arrested A Day After 3 Engineering Students Drown In Mangaluru Resort’s Swimming Pool

New Delhi: A day after three women students drowned in the swimming pool of a…

November 18, 2024