Staunton, April 22 – Most
discussions of the impact of global warming on the Russian Federation have
focused either on the ways in which the melting of permafrost will damage
infrastructure in the northern part of that country, imposing severe economic
costs, or extend the growing season in many places, giving Russia some economic
advantages.
But Boris Zhukov, a Russian
biologist, suggests that the greatest impact and greatest danger from global
warming on his country may not be on infrastructure or growing seasons but
rather in the release of bacteria during the melting of the permafrost that
could lead to the spread of diseases no one has the ability to fight (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/179696).
In an article in the New Times provocatively entitled “The
Ice will Melt and We will All Die,” the Russian scholar says that global warming
almost certainly will mean “the spread of new and old diseases,” many of which
risk becoming epidemics in Russia and even spreading beyond the borders of that
country.
Many Russians like to talk about the
benefits global warming will bring their country, he says; but overall, that
change is not going to bring us “anything good.” It isn’t so much that the melting of the
permafrost will release diseases medical science is familiar with, although
that will happen.
Instead, with the melting of the
ice, “certain pathogens with which we are not acquainted, certain strains or
even types” will come back into the atmosphere.
Because they are unknown to science, these could easily cause epidemics
that could kill large number of people in Rusisa and elsewhere.
That is a longterm and by definition
impossible to evaluate risk, but there is a real and immediate risk of
epidemics connected with climate change, the biologist says. “Changes in
average annual temperatures can cause some species of insects and other arthropods
to move northward,” spreading diseases from the south that northerners have no
immunity to.
One of these – and it is no joke,
Zhukov says – is malaria. “That is far
from the only such infection capable of shifting to the North” and causing catastrophe.
And there is an additional reason
for worry: an increasing number of Russians apparently is not being vaccinated
for ordinary diseases, either because of cost or the lack of availability of
medications; and as a result, an article in Vzglyad
warns, Russia may soon face epidemics of diseases it and others assume have
been overcome (vz.ru/society/2019/4/21/973551.html).
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