Bill Gates thinks coming disease could kill 30m in 6 months


FE Team | Published: April 28, 2018 13:06:25 | Updated: May 01, 2018 15:20:54


Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; speaks at a panel discussion on Building Human Capital during the IMF/World Bank spring meeting in Washington, US, Apr 21. Reuters

Billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates says the US and the rest of the world lack a sense of urgency to counter biological threats.

The American tech mogul said if there was one thing that we know from history it is that a deadly new disease will arise and spread around the globe.

That could happen easily within the next decade and we are not ready, said Gates on Friday at a discussion about epidemics hosted by the Massachusetts Medical Society and the New England Journal of Medicine.

Gates acknowledged that he is usually the optimist in the room and reminded the audience that children are being freed from poverty around the globe and that science is getting better at eliminating diseases like polio and malaria.

But “there is one area though where the world is not making much progress,” Gates said, “and that is pandemic preparedness.”

The likelihood that such a disease will appear continues to rise, he added.

New pathogens emerge all the time as the world population increases and humanity encroaches on wild environments and it is becoming easier and easier for individual people or small groups to create weaponised diseases that could spread like wildfire around the globe, he warned.

According to Gates, a small non-state actor could build an even deadlier form of smallpox in a lab.

And in our interconnected world, where people are always hopping on planes, crossing from cities on one continent to another it could spread in a matter of hours.

Gates presented a simulation by the Institute for Disease Modeling that found that a new flu similar to the one that killed 50 million people in the 1918 pandemic would now most likely kill 30 million people within six months, according to a Business Insider report run by bdnews24.

And the disease that next takes us by surprise is likely to be one we see for the first time at the start of an outbreak, similar to the recent SARS and MERS virus incidents, Gates said.

If you were to tell the world’s governments that weapons that could kill 30 million people were under construction right now, there would be a sense of urgency about preparing for the threat, he said.

“In the case of biological threats, that sense of urgency is lacking,” he said. “The world needs to prepare for pandemics in the same serious way it prepares for war.”

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