A new
report
published in The Lancet Planetary
Health journal found that
intergovernmental reports on climate change and biodiversity loss fail to
consider the complex, non-linear interactions among climate, biodiversity and
infectious disease.
“The concurrent pressures of rising global temperatures, rates and incidence of
species decline, and the emergence of infectious diseases represent an
unprecedented planetary crisis,” the report reads. “Intergovernmental reports
have drawn focus to the escalating climate and biodiversity crises and the
connections between them, but interactions among all three pressures have been
largely overlooked. Non-linearities and dampening and reinforcing interactions
among pressures make considering interconnections essential to anticipating
planetary challenges.”
Out of nearly two million research papers written on climate change,
biodiversity and disease, only 29 papers quantify the impacts of all three
levers.
“There is now a pressing need to investigate the expansion and effects of
disease in humans, domestic animals, wildlife and plants as primary and
secondary drivers and as a consequence of biodiversity–climate relations,” the
report says.
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Jonathan Davies,
a professor in the Department of Botany and Forest and Conservation Science at
the University of British Columbia, was the senior researcher on the new
paper. Its findings, he told Sustainable Brands®, sound a warning against
putting global problems and their “solutions” in silos.
“This is the fundamental issue: If no non-linearities or no complex cycles were
feeding back into the different pressures, we could treat every pressure
individually and generate responses to those pressures without consideration of
other pressures. [But] we're recognizing now that these crises shouldn't be
siloed,” Davies said. “They should be thought of together — and we're looking at
the sort of solution pathways, policy and societal pathways that can help
address those interactions between those crises. This paper is … part of that
movement — a rallying cry, really emphasizing the need to do this, to move away
outside our silos and get a bit uncomfortable.”
One example is the case of the rinderpest
virus carried to Africa by
European livestock — which spread to wildlife, killing off millions of
wildebeest. The savannah, untrammeled by the usual millions of wildebeest
hooves, produced heavier vegetative growth — becoming a tinder box for the
drought-prone region. Vaccinating cattle against rinderpest leads to fewer
crossovers to wildlife, higher wildebeest numbers, fewer fires and decreased
emissions.
“There are a huge number of causal pathways, some of which you have to tease
apart,” Davies said. “The emphasis on this [report] is that you need to consider
those causal pathways when you're looking for solutions to these crises … that
helps you both avoid these sorts of ecological surprises — these unintended
consequences where you exacerbate a pressure accidentally — and also allows you
identify win-win-win situations.”
In the case of carbon
credits,
certifying bodies and customers should consider whether forestry-based carbon
credits are better achieved through protecting old-growth forests or planting
new forests. A holistic approach may reveal that efforts should be concentrated
on maintaining old-growth forests, which are excellent carbon sinks and provide
dizzying biodiversity benefits.
“If we think about all the benefits biodiversity provides us, not just the CO2
benefits, the value of biodiversity incorporated into these calculations might
shift our decision making from ‘should we just plant trees?’” Davies pointed
out.
Businesses usually narrowly focus on factors that fit neatly into a quarterly or
annual report. Considering such factors as
biodiversity
and ecosystem
services
in business reporting is a very recent phenomenon. However, eco-benefits go
beyond prescribed worth — so, these and other benefits should be equalized and
included in reporting, especially risk disclosures.
“In the business world, it's attractive to put everything in a dollar amount,”
Davies said. “So, if we do that [biodiversity
accounting],
we can incorporate some of these ecosystem services into the value of natural
habitats and biodiversity.”
Identifying those points is critical, he continued, in creating a
socio-economic-ecological system that uses science and heart to live within
planetary boundaries and respect its pre-existing life-support systems.
Zoonotic disease
spillover,
he continued, is just one of a myriad of the things the market rarely, if ever,
values. COVID, itself a zoonotic disease, was just the beginning. Davies
affirms we must expect and prepare for the possibility of zoonotic diseases
happening more
often
as development spreads and wildlife is further cornered into degraded habitats.
Ignoring connectivity between
systems
means missing the opportunity to target the root cause of
pressure,
instead of simply treating the symptoms of the polycrisis.
“These are all things that need to be done, but they're not getting at the root
cause of why we're seeing the greater storm surges or increased spillover [of
disease],” he said. “By failing to consider these interactions and just
responding to the more proximate impacts that we're observing, we're not going
to solve the fundamental issues and it's going to become exponentially more
expensive.”
Identifying connections won’t be easy and will require a coordinated effort on a
global scale. Admittedly, it’s not something humans are particularly good at
doing, but it’s necessary to prepare for a warming world and mitigate its
impacts. As Davies pointed out, you don’t have to travel to a remote cave in
China to find the next potential pandemic: SARS-like viruses have been
discovered in bats in the
United Kingdom, which could be just one disaster or system change away from
becoming the next pandemic.
“We don't like those complicated answers, but I think we need to embrace them
more and prioritize them,” Davies asserts. “We need lots of data and we need
sophisticated models … And we're just at a time where we have that sort of data
coming in — [such as] on-the-ground and-remote sensing data.”
Failure to address these global connections is why we’ve failed to stay on track
with global targets such as those set in the Paris Agreement and
Kunming-Montreal Biodiversity
Targets
that emerged from
COP15.
“Every time we set ourselves a target, we've missed it,” Davies said. “We've got
to ask ourselves why, and how can we make sure we're not just setting up …
another target we're going to miss? How do we set targets and identify the
solutions pathways so we can actually meet them? That's the big goal — so, we
need a new approach.”
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Christian is a writer, photographer, filmmaker, and outdoor junkie obsessed with the intersectionality between people and planet. He partners with brands and organizations with social and environmental impact at their core, assisting them in telling stories that change the world.
Published Apr 29, 2024 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST