The @IPBES #PandemicsReport shows that the same human activities driving #biodiversity loss and #ClimateChange are also making #pandemics more frequent, more costly and more deadly The Report also shows how we can escape the era of pandemics Read more 👉 ipbes.net/pandemics

Oct 30, 2020 · 9:10 AM UTC

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Replying to @IPBES @UNESCO
The question: We been informed that people ate s**t, handled s**t. Easy! S**t means bats and bugs and such. Intestines of animals, with feces and whole corpses. There is selection and hygiene! WHY does it come from same place? No responsability, to change? Don't eat s**t and die.
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Since 1918: Spanish flu, 1918 (H1N1) Asian flu, 1957 (H2N2) Cholera, 1961 Hong Kong flu, 1968 (H3N2) Swine flu, 2009 (H1N1) HIV Smallpox?
Replying to @IPBES
Mientras las #Instituciones #Regionales y #mundiales no tengan el talento para regular todo tipo de excesos que perjudiquen al #medioambiente y a la #Justicia entre los #hombres bajo el esquema (Premio - Castigo) dichos organismos serán inútiles para el #Mundo
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Wild elephants get killed in Thailand when they roam the farmlands which were still their forest a year ago. Should we be supporting farming at any cost?#ClimateChange
The appalling conditions at Chinese markets will not disappear when a vaccine is available, unless we demand more than just liberal appeals. Which virus is coming next? #pandemics
Replying to @IPBES
Pandemic report cites evidence that scaling up land rights of #Indigenous Peoples & local communities prevents deforestation & biodiversity loss--conditions that enable the emergence of dangerous #pathogens. For insight into obstacles blocking their role: earth.columbia.edu/projects/…
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Replying to @IPBES
"Tax high pandemic-risk activities" Sometimes there are better strategies than tax. For example, what about helping a beef farmer financially while he transitions to regenerative agriculture, with half his land re-wilded? Less cattle, more plants and wildlife, and healthy soil.