Another deadly pandemic seems inevitable – but there is a way to avoid it | John Vidal

We are not helpless: we need to do big things quickly, though, to halt the disturbance of nature. And I fear that ’s not happeningJohn Vidal is a former Guardian environment editorWhen he bought the pretty little striped field mouse on the internet for $8to give to his daughter for her sixth birthday, the businessman from S ão Paulo was told it was free of infection and had been bred by a registered dealer. In fact, it had been sourced from the vast sugar cane fields planted in Brazil to grow biofuels to reduce the use of fossil fuels – and which were swarming with rodents after yet another heatwave.It nipped his daughter on the finger, but no one thought much of it – and six days later, he left on a trip to Europe. By the time he reached Amsterdam, she had started suffering fevers, muscle aches and breathing problems and had been rushed to hospital, and he too felt unwell. It was the start of one of the worst pandemics in human history, killing more people t han Covid-19, Sars or the 1918 flu pandemic put together.John Vidal is the Guardian ’s former environment editor and author of Fevered Planet: How Diseases Emerge When We Harm Nature (Bloomsbury, £20). To support The Guardian and Observer, order your copy atguardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Infectious diseases Science Global health Animals Environment Climate crisis World news UK news Medical research Source Type: news