Deforestation may have triggered the recent Ebola outbreak in west Africa, France’s Minister for the Environment Ségolène Royal told a London summit hosted by the Prince of Wales ahead of next month’s COP21 conference.
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Addressing the British Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, Amber Rudd, representatives from forest nation governments and global companies, Royal said researchers believe the destruction of forest habitat brought bats, known to carry the virus, into greater contact with humans, EurActiv reports in partnership with The Guardian.
“They had to clear the forest to begin subsistence agriculture and the deforestation has also been caused by mining activity and large-scale logging for export,” she told the high-level meeting at Lancaster House.
“This destruction of the natural habitat of fruit-eating bats drove the animals to approach human settlements to find food and the virus may have been transmitted during this increased contact resulting from deforestation,” she said.
The one-day conference on deforestation and climate change, attended by environment ministers from Brazil, Panama, Congo and Norway, as well as senior representatives from Unilever, Marks & Spencer and Cargill, was hosted by the prince’s International Sustainability Unit.
Next month Charles, who in 2007 set up the Prince’s Rainforest Group to find a solution to save the world’s threatened forests, will deliver a keynote speech at the invitation of the French president, François Hollande, before world leaders at the Paris COP21 conference, as attempts are made to reach new international agreements to help limit global warming to no more than two degrees. ■
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