Democracy Dies in Darkness

How climate change is raising the risks of another pandemic

Evidence is mounting that human disruptions to natural ecosystems are raising risks of disease spread, according to a new study.

May 8, 2024 at 11:14 a.m. EDT
People buy mosquito nets on April 25, World Malaria Day, in Peshawar, Pakistan. (Bilawal Arbab/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
5 min

As humans degrade Earth’s environment, we have created a world in which diseases may be increasingly apt to fester and multiply.

Infection-spreading creatures such as mosquitoes and ticks are thriving on a planet warmed by a blanket of fossil fuel emissions. When pollution, hunting or development push rare organisms to extinction, parasites proliferate because they have evolved to target the most abundant species.