Monday, September 02, 2024

Antivaccine nonsense

Stanford University promotes disastrous “natural herd immunity” approaches to the pandemic

A week and a half ago, Stanford University announced a conference on pandemic policy that features several of the usual suspects who spread misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Truly, Stanford has become the “respectable” academic face of efforts to undermine public health.

Post author
By  Orac
Post date September 2, 2024

LONG READ

Stanford University School of Medicine Center for Academic Medicine.

If there was one thing that I would not have predicted—but, arguably, should have been able to predict—regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s the degree to which my fellow academics, particularly physicians and scientists, would contribute to public fear, misunderstanding, and doubt about public health interventions utilized to mitigate the worst of the pandemic. If I had been able to predict the level of complicity of my fellow academics in advocating for just letting the disease rip in a futile bid to achieve “natural herd immunity,” opposing tried-and-true interventions to slow the spread of respiratory diseases (e.g., masking) using a narrow fundamentalist interpretation of evidence-based medicine (EBM), promoting unproven “repurposed drugs” as near miracle cures, and even fear mongering about vaccines, I might have been able to predict that Stanford University would end up being the epicenter of such activities, if only because of its tight affiliation with the right wing think tank, The Hoover Institution. If that weren’t enough, then the fact that one of the authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, the document advocating a “let ‘er rip” approach to the pandemic promising “natural herd immunity” in six monthsDr. Jay Bhattacharya, is Stanford faculty should have helped. So should the fact that Dr. John Ioannidis, formerly the greatest EBM guru (whom I once admired) who very early in the pandemic took a heel turn in favor of minimizing how dangerous COVID-19 was and advocating—you guessed it—”natural herd immunity” approaches to the pandemic.

That background is why, while I was disappointed, I wasn’t entirely surprised to start seeing posts like this on social media:

Vinay Prasad and Monica Ghandi are only two of the participants in this conference and, arguably, not even the worst ones.

Of course, four years later, I’ve become all too familiar with the dismal track record of certain prominent Stanford University faculty with respect to promoting bad science, pseudoscience, and misinformation about the pandemic. For example, look what happened to Renée DiResta, who was the technical research manager at Stanford Internet Observatory, a cross-disciplinary program of research, teaching and policy engagement for the study of adversarial abuse in current information technologies. Unfortunately, the example of DiResta is just another example of why Stanford has gotten even more problematic. The mission of the Stanford Internet Observatory has been “refocused,” with Stanford having having ended the Election Integrity Partnership’s rapid-response election observation work designed to analyze and counter election misinformation. As a result of Republican pressure, the Stanford Internet Observatory is in essence being dismantled right before the election, and Stanford didn’t renew DiResta’s contract or the contracts of several other employees.

Naturally, I was intrigued. So let’s take a look at this one-day conference, who is participating, and how these participants have “distinguished themselves” as—alas!—highly influential (mostly) academic pandemic minimizers and COVID-19 misinformation spreaders.

Pandemic Policy: Planning the Future, Assessing the Past?

The title of the conference is Pandemic Policy: Planning the Future, Assessing the Past, which should tell you a lot. For example, knowing who the speakers and panelists are, I know that “assessing the past” will likely consist of highly revisionist history of the COVID-19 pandemic presented through the lens of claiming that public health interventions didn’t work and then justifying a “plan” for the future in which all those pesky public health measures that interfered with “freedom” be minimized or not used at all. Let’s take a look at how the conference is being advertised:

Bringing together esteemed academics, public health practitioners, journalists, and government officials from all sides of the COVID-19 policy debate in conversation with one another with an eye toward reforms in science and public health to better serve the public.

With millions of lives lost, the COVID-19 pandemic wrought havoc on the world. Despite decades of planning for the “next” pandemic, public health systems faced tremendous stress and often buckled and failed. Universities served as centers for valuable scientific work but failed to support their academic freedom mission by sponsoring vigorous discussion and debate on matters of pandemic policy. To do better in the next pandemic, we need to learn the lessons of the COVID-19 era.

“Esteemed academics, public health practitioners, journalists, and government officials from all sides of the COVID-19 policy debate”? My first reaction was to laugh derisively. No, far from “all sides” are represented. The best that could be said is that the truly radical “infect the all to reach ‘natural herd immunity’ faster” contingent—e.g., Scott Atlas (yes, that Scot Atlas!)— is “balanced” by those who think that it was acceptable to do some public health interventions and try to save some lives, as long as the interventions weren’t too “onerous” (by their definition) and didn’t disrupt business or school too much (again, by their definition). It’s like the line from the 1980 movie The Blues Brothers in which the owner of a bar where the Blues Brothers had been booked to play answers their question about what kind of music the bar features: “We got both kinds. We got country and western!”

 Declaration, which was signed on October 4, 2020 and then released to the world the following day. I have a hard time believing that the selection of this particular date for this particular Stanford conference was not entirely intentional, given the involvement of a signatory of the Great Barrington Declaration (Sunetra Gupta) and GBD-adjacent faculty as panelists. I could be wrong—and maybe I am wrong—but it’s hard not to see the choice of date as very intentional. Another oddity is that October 4 is during Rosh Hashanah, one of the most important Jewish holidays, with the site even noting this thusly, “We are aware that the conference date coincides with Rosh Hashanah. We deeply appreciate the significance of this holiday and regret the overlap.” I guess lining the conference up with the fourth anniversary of the signing of the GBD was too important to schedule the conference on a day when Jewish faculty could attend.

OK, I’ll stop, as I know I’m risking starting to sound as conspiratorial as some of the faculty recruited as panelists for this conference!

Still, it’s worth a brief reminder. The Great Barrington Declaration (GBD) was a “scientific” declaration facilitated by the right-wing “free market” think tank, the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER). Named for the location of AIER’s headquarters in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, the GBD called for what was, in essence, a “let ‘er rip” approach to the pandemic to achieve “natural herd immunity” in six months by letting the young and healthy just get COVID and using “focused protection” to keep those at high risk of death and complications from COVID safe. It’s a tactic that never would have workedand didn’t work—and was profoundly social Darwinist at its heart. Of particular note, how “focused protection” would work was never really spelled out in sufficient detail to determine just how the GBD signatories would keep those most at risk for death and severe disease due to COVID-19 safe.

Also, adding to the imprimatur of Stanford University being placed on this conference, Stanford President Jonathan Levin will be providing the opening remarks to introduce the day’s proceedings. Of note, he became President of Stanford on August 1, 2024; so he’s new in the job. I also note that the Wayback Machine shows that the conference’s webpage first went live on or around August 2, a placeholder that described the conference, but left all the speakers and panelists to be “announced later.” I guess “later” means a week and a half ago.) Most likely, this conference was being organized before Levin officially became Stanford University president, but it is disturbing that he would basically agree to participate, even in the ceremonial manner that most university presidents giving opening remarks at a university-hosted conference do.

Levin, of course, is not a public health scientist or physician. Rather, he is an economist who was elevated to university president after having served before that as the Dean of the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He’s also a collaborator who has published with Dr. Jay Bhattacharya before in economics journals. Even though Bhattacharya is not a speaker or panelist, it makes sense that Levin would be amenable to participating by introducing the conference, especially since Bhattacharya has stated on X, the hellsite formerly known as Twitter, that he is the main organizer of the conference:

Quelle surprise that Dr. Bhattacharya is the main organizer. It is actually surprising that he isn’t a speaker or panelist in the conference he’s organizing, given his ego.

Let’s look at the various sessions of this conference.

“Evidence-Based Decision Making During a Pandemic”?

Session 1 is entitled Evidence-Based Decision Making During a Pandemic. The blurb describing it seems benign enough; that is, if you are unfamiliar with the participants:

The interventions undertaken to control the COVID-19 pandemic – lockdowns, extended school closures, social distancing, mask mandates, vaccine mandates – were unprecedented in their scope and global impact. How well did these policies work to protect the public from COVID-19 and what were their collateral harms? How can scientists better inform pandemic policy in real time during the next pandemic?

Of course, the key aspect of the GBD and pandemic minimizers is that they always underplay the harm of the virus and overplay the “collateral damage” from public health policy designed to address the pandemic. One of the key giveaways here is the choice of “language,” particularly “lockdowns.” Basically, “lockdowns” has turned into one of those right-wing dog whistles that the “freedom über alles” contingent always uses—usually with a sneer—to describe business and school closures and shelter-in-place orders. While it is true that there were business and school closures, there was never anything in terms of policy that approached the sorts of real “lockdowns” that one saw in some authoritarian regimes, in particular China. Moreover, again, the GBD was never about protecting the public from COVID-19. It was about opening up the country for business as fast as possible without regard for harms that the “young and healthy” might suffer from the virus, and only a passing nod to protecting those who were actually the most vulnerable to severe disease and death from COVID-19. Again, as I like to point out, “natural herd immunity” was always a pipe dream for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, given that natural herd immunity requires lifelong—or at least very long-lasting—postinfection immunity. It had long been known by 2020 that postinfection immunity from coronaviruses tends to be relatively brief and that coronaviruses are very good at evolving variants that can bypass preexisting immunity due to infection with prior variants. Even in October 2020 (or March 2020, when some of the earliest versions of a “natural herd immunity” approach to the pandemic started popping up among certain academics, such as John Ioannidis), one would have had to ignore everything that was known about coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-1, to think that “natural herd immunity” was even a possibility, much less the truly fantastical belief that such population immunity could be achieved in six months through mass infection.

But let’s look at the participants in this session:

Drs. Marty Makary and Monica Gandhi have been discussed a number times here. Makary, you might remember, was one of the originators of the false claim turned into an all-too-commonly repeated fake factoid that’s treated as true that medical errors are the third leading cause of death in the US, a claim based on ridiculous extrapolation from relatively small studies that doesn’t pass even a basic “smell test.” What I mean by that is that 250K-400K deaths from medical errors would translate to up to 15% of all deaths and over half of the deaths of hospitalized patients in the US that occur every single year. The real number, although still too high, is likely 10- to 20-fold lower. As embarrassed as I was then that Dr. Makary shares my specialty (surgical oncology), I was even more embarrassed at how he quickly became a COVID-19 minimizer starting very early in the pandemic, repeatedly proclaiming an “end to the pandemic” because we’ll have herd immunity” by this date or other and repeatedly being wrong about the pandemic being over.

Monica Gandhi probably represents one of the “both kinds” of COVID-19 minimization in that throughout the pandemic she presented herself as the “reasonable” middle ground between “let ‘er rip” ideologues like Makary and Atlas and conventional public health science recommending standard public health interventions to mitigate the pandemic, viewing the latter as too strict, all the while polluting the COVID-19 information landscape with obvious misinformation and falsely pacified people the worst was over, when in fact the worst was yet to come. Basically, she tried to have it both ways, as Dr. Howard described:

Though she initially said, “It’s simple math. We don’t need to vaccinate those under 11 to get to herd immunity”, she eventually wrote an passionate defense of pediatric COVID vaccination, for example. It’s also likely she will discuss uncontroversial blunders, such as the CDC’s botched tests at the start and the tragedy of those who died due to anti-vaccine misinformation.  Who could argue with her call to encourage outdoor activities?

However, these potential areas of agreement aside, Dr. Gandhi unleashed a firehose of poor predictions and bogus statistics throughout the pandemic, always minimizing the virus, of course. If you are unfamiliar with her overwhelming litany of pollyannaish prognostications, repeated declarations of herd immunity, and mocking those who disagreed- “I genuinely with all my heart apologize for anyone who continues to try to scare you about variants“-  I suggest you familiarize yourself here: Pandemic Accountability IndexMehdi Hasanme, and me again.

Those last few links are excellent summaries of why Dr. Gandhi has been so problematic.

But what about the other two? I’m less familiar with Eran Bendavid other than that he, too, is Stanford faculty, but he has been featured on this blog before. For example, he was coauthor with Drs. Jay Bhattacharya and John Ioanndis of an early infamous study that vastly overestimated the seroprevalence of COVID-19 in Santa Clara county and was widely used to argue that the infection fatality rate (IFR) was so low that we didn’t really need to do anything—hint: “lockdowns,” masking, and social distancing—to address COVID-19. He also co-authored a March 2020 op-ed with Bhattacharya in the conservative Wall Street Journal asking, Is the Coronavirus as Deadly as They Say? (You can guess their answer.) As I like to remind my readers, pretty much everything Jay Bhattacharya has said about the pandemic has turned out to be spectacularly wrong, particularly his predictions. As for Bendavid, as he decried the “Faustian bargain” that made pandemic scientists media figures in 2021, he also revealed a bit too much of an open mind, to the point of being open enough to allow one’s brains to fall out:

The ideal scientist comes into her trade with a sense of wonder, curiosity, openness, and marvel at what nature has to show us. The corruption of scientific norms is a collective manifestation of the erosion of many scientists’ spirits. Many—I would venture most—scientists hold that spirit as a personal ideal. Its erosion happens when science gets blended with social, economic, and psychological forces that exploit the human being inside the scientist, and none more strongly than the media with its fondness for conflict, strife, and black-or-white-ism.

This all sounds lovely, if you don’t know the actual context and the veritable cottage industry of contrarian scientists who stoked fear, uncertainty, and doubt about public health—and continue to do so—and that Bendavid collaborated willingly with scientists who are experts at the very dark arts he self-righteously decries.

As for Anders Tegnell, those who sought to minimize the severity of COVID-19 and advocate a “let ‘er rip” approach loved Sweden because, supposedly, its policies were not so restrictive, while falsely representing Sweden’s COVID-19 results as being as good or better than its neighbors. (And, yes, Sweden did close schools.) Tegnell was a central figure in this and has represented himself as some sort of truth-teller who stood up to conventional wisdom (and was right). Let’s just say that GBD author Martin Kulldorff thanked Tegnell in March 2020 for his “wise epidemiological sane Covid-19 work.” What did he mean by that? Pursuing a “natural herd immunity” approach to the pandemic, of course! He also declared in March 2020, “Herd immunity before vaccine is inevitable, basically no matter what we do to prevent it.” By April 2020, he was voicing the delusion that there “may be herd immunity in Stockholm by May.” (How did that work out?) Again, the Pandemic Accountability Index has a roundup of Tegnell’s actions and quotes that demonstrate clearly that he was solidly in the “natural herd immunity” camp, as well as a deconstruction of the “Swedish myth” that Sweden did well because of that approach and evidence of how much of a fanboy Tegnell was of one of the most notorious social media influencers pushing COVID-19 misinformation, Ivor Cummins, a.k.a. The Fat Emperor.

Truly, a “fair and balanced” panel. I’m sure they’ll express a moderate, evidence-based take on the successes and failures of public health interventions for COVID-19. (Yes, that’s sarcasm, in case it wasn’t obvious.)

Onward to Session #2, which is even cringier.

Pandemic Policy from a Global Perspective?

The second session is entitled Pandemic Policy from a Global Perspective. It is represented thusly:

Because the world economy is global in scope, pandemic policy decisions made by Western governments had profound impacts on the health and economic prospects of people worldwide, including the collapse of global markets, severe supply chain disruptions, large-scale government borrowing to finance pandemic policies, and global inflation. How can the interests of the world’s poor be better represented in the decisions of Western government during the next pandemic?

Yes, you can guess what this will be about. It will likely misrepresent real concerns and debates about disparities in pandemic response, access to vaccines, and health care capacity in poor nations compared to rich nations being exacerbated by the responses of wealthy Western governments as reasons that we should have just pursued a “natural herd immunity” approach. Yes, I’ve seen this movie before. The basic argument is that, because the populations of less developed, poorer nations tend to be on average younger than the populations of more developed nations, letting the virus rip in such countries can achieve “natural herd immunity” faster and with less potential suffering and death than in developed countries (although this fact never stopped that GBD-adjacent from arguing that we should pursue “natural herd immunity” in developed countries too). Never mind that the crowding, the poorer health and nutrition, and the much less robust healthcare infrastructure in such countries would likely obviate any “advantage” in terms of lower morbidity and mortality when a younger population undergoes mass infection.

Let’s look at the participants:

I won’t say much more about Sunetra Gupta, given that she was one of the authors of the GBD and remains an advocate of “natural herd immunity.” Nor do I find it necessary to say a lot about Dr. Vinay Prasad, given that he’s been one of the most prolific social media influencers promoting COVID-19 minimization, antimask misinformation, and even fear-mongering about the COVID-19 vaccines that has expanded to echoing old antivax tropes about the childhood vaccine schedule. Suffice to say that Dr. Prasad opposed the COVID-19 vaccine for children even before it was approved for children; has portrayed concern about the virus as “irrational” fear; embraced the antivax message of “do not comply”; frequently misrepresented studies as demonstrating the COVID-19 vaccine is dangerous; approved of reporting parents who want to vaccinate their children against COVID-19 to child protective services; has repeatedly denied that virus mitigation measures work; and echoed antivaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s misleading claim that most of the childhood vaccination schedule has never been tested against saline placebo controls in RCTs.

I’m not as familiar with Kevin Bardosh and Anup Malani as perhaps I should be. Bardosh is Director and Head of Research at Collateral Global, a research institute and educational charity based in the UK. He is also affiliated with the School of Public Health, University of Washington and Edinburgh Medical School, and a perusal of his X (Twitter) feed shows that he is very much on the side of emphasizing the harms of the world’s COVID-19 response compared to any benefits. Collateral Global is anything but a pro-public health organization, too. Basically, it’s a GBD-adjacent, anti-“lockdown” org formed by GBD author Gupta and others:

Collateral Global is founded and directed by Sunetra Gupta and her partner Alexander Caccia, a UK Ministry of Defence contractor with ties to Canadian government fossil fuel investments, who had secretly drafted the GBD document. He had also secured PR support for Gupta’s claims about herd immunity from an agency linked to the Cabinet Office ‘Nudge Unit’. OpenDemocracy has now revealed that Gupta personally received funding for her discredited research on herd immunity from a Tory billionaire.

Indeed, it appears to have been formed by all three GBD authors, as discussed in this email:

From the depth of our hearts, a belated thank you for signing the Great Barrington Declaration. With over 850,000 signatures, together we opened up the pandemic debate. While many governments continued with their failed lockdown and other restrictive policies, things have moved in the right direction. For example, most schools have re-opened, most countries prioritized older people for vaccination and Florida rejected restrictions in favor of focused protection without the negative consequencesthat lockdowners predicted.

While occasionally censored, we have not been silenced. Since authoring the Declaration in October 2020, the three of us have actively advocated for focused protection through social media, op-eds and interviews on, for example, vaccine passports and natural immunity.

We have also launched Collateral Global, a charity staffed with academics from across the world to document and disseminate information about the collateral damage of the restrictive measures so that we don’t repeat the mistakes of this pandemic and are able to inform future policy with evidence and analysis. Collateral Global is crowdfunding so that this work can be done to the highest possible standards. You are welcome to join us and help us in those efforts at www.collateralglobal.org, as well as follow us on Twitter, etc. We are also planning an initiative on scientific freedom soon.

 With enormous gratitude,

 Jay Bhattacharya    Sunetra Gupta    Martin Kulldorff

Well, alrighty then. Of course, if you don’t believe me, feel free to peruse its website, where Kevin Bardosh bemoaned the WHO calling misinformation spreaders “conspiracy theorists” (which the vast majority of them are). He also published (with several of the usual suspects, including Makary, Prasad, and others) an infamous article arguing that college booster mandates were unethical, based on inappropriate comparisons.

As for Anup Malani, he’s an Indian economist and lawyer, faculty at the University of Chicago, not a public health scientist or physician. He seems to think that because economists are good at statistics they are also good at analyzing COVID-19:

While I don’t disagree that sometimes an “outsider” can bring a new perspective to investigations, I also note that often “outsiders” lack deep subject knowledge that is possessed by actual subject experts. Perusing Malani’s publication record, I find less to object to from him, other than his being interviewed by the COVID-19 minimizers at Collateral Global. Perhaps he’s one of the “both” country and western, as well. (If anyone is more familiar with his work than I could become Googling him, perusing his publications, and looking at his social media feeds, please weigh in down in the comments.) It will also be interesting to see how he responds to the virus minimization blather of the other panelists and the borderline antivax bleatings of Dr. Prasad. If he is one of the reasonable panelists, he will likely turn out to be the token skeptic on the panel.

Onward to Session #3.

Misinformation, Censorship, and Academic Freedom?

Session #3, Misinformation, Censorship, and Academic Freedom, is the one that produced the biggest “WTF?” reaction from me, for obvious reasons, namely the panel participants. Its description is full of false dichotomies:

The pandemic saw the conflict of two clashing approaches to informing the public and protecting it against rumors and harmful falsehoods. On the one hand, governments censored information contrary to public health pronouncements in social media settings and heavily influenced traditional media sources to convey those pronouncements. On the other hand, dissident scientists and university professors sought means to reach the public with their message despite censorship and suppression. Does the suspension of free speech rights during a pandemic help keep the population better informed or does it permit the perpetuation of false ideas by governments?

“Dissident scientists”? More like “brave maverick doctors,” COVID-19 minimizers, and outright cranks, many of whom started out as one or the other of the first two and, as the pandemic progressed, evolved into the third. (Martin Kulldorff and Vinay Prasad immediately come to mind.) Also, although I wasn’t (initially) familiar with the moderator (George Tidmarsh), get a load of the panelists:

Yikes! Hosting a panel on misinformation, censorship, and academic freedom with Scott Atlas and Jenin Younes as the sole panels is a lot like having a discussion panel on childhood vaccines and autism consisting of Andrew Wakefield (godfather of the 21st century antivax movement) and Aaron Siri (a lawyer who frequently works with antivaxxers like RFK Jr. and Del Bigtree)! Also, why just two on the panel? It’s not as though the conference lineup isn’t packed with COVID-19 cranks bemoaning how they’ve supposedly been “canceled” and “censored.” Surely one or two of them could have done double-duty and appeared on two panels.

Dr. Scott Atlas, you might remember, is a neuroradiologist and, so it seems, a formerly well-respected one, having served as the chief of the neuroradiology section at Stanford University. Unfortunately, Dr. Atlas became a right-wing hack at The Hoover Institution at Stanford, a conservative think tank that’s been a font of bad takes on COVID-19, where the organizer of the conference, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, is also a senior fellow. In 2020, he improbably (and briefly) served as a key advisor to President Donald Trump about the government pandemic response, despite his utter lack of expertise in any relevant medical or scientific discipline to do so. Atlas, of course, has featured here before and a fairly frequent topic on my not-so-super-secret other blog, given all the misinformation he has spewed (and continues to spew). Dr. Howard, who’s kept a careful log of his statements, most recently last month. Unsurprisingly, Dr. Atlas was entirely on board with the GBD, and, as a result, in October 2020 the Trump administration was seriously considering a herd immunity-based strategy before there was even a vaccine.

By November 2020, Stanford was distancing itself from Dr. Atlas because he had urged resistance to public health policies and mandates:

Stanford University on Monday evening distanced itself from White House coronavirus task force member Dr. Scott Atlas, a senior fellow at the school’s Hoover Institution, after he urged Michigan residents to “rise up” against new public health measures.

“Stanford’s position on managing the pandemic in our community is clear. We support using masks, social distancing, and conducting surveillance and diagnostic testing. We also believe in the importance of strictly following the guidance of local and state health authorities,” the university said in a tweet. 

“Dr. Atlas has expressed views that are inconsistent with the university’s approach in response to the pandemic. Dr. Atlas’s statements reflect his personal views, not those of the Hoover Institution or the university.”

In particular, this now deleted Tweet caused an uproar, and this is personal to me because Atlas’ Tweet was in response to pandemic restrictions in Michigan:

Atlas later tried to take it back, but no one believed him:

I remember that in April 2020, armed militia menaced legislators in Michigan because they disapproved of the “lockdowns” and public health mandates that Gov. Gretchen Whitmer had ordered. I highly doubt that Dr. Atlas was unaware of that history when he urged people to “rise up.” His reaction to the criticism of his Tweet was very disingenuous. I could go on and on about Dr. Atlas, but just use the search box on this blog or my not-so-super-secret other blog, and peruse Dr. Howard’s recent post about him.

As for Jenin Younes, yikes again! First, note that she is a lawyer who has been closely associated with AIER, under whose auspices Bhattacharya, Kuldorff, and Gupta wrote the GBD and whose Twitter handle used to be @leftylockdowns1. A brief perusal of her articles and social media feeds demonstrates that she’s all about opposing any mandatory public health response to COVID-19, including “lockdowns” and mask and vaccine mandates. Her New Civil Liberties Alliance also sued to enjoin California’s law penalizing doctors for disseminating so-called misinformation about COVID-19 to patients. So, she’s pro-quack, too.

I’m sensing a theme here for this conference. On to Session #4!

COVID-19 Origins and the Regulation of Virology?

The last session is entitled COVID-19 Origins and the Regulation of Virology. Given what’s come before, I’m sure you can guess what the focus will be here, but let’s see what the organizers say:

The stakes in the debate about the origin of the pandemic could not be higher. If the pandemic started from an inadequately regulated wildlife trade or zoonoses, reforms to reduce the likelihood of human contact with wild species is vital. On the other hand, if the pandemic started due to dangerous laboratory experiments and inadequate protocols to prevent leaks, then more stringent regulation of such experimentation is warranted. What is the evidence on these topics, and what is the path forward?

This sounds reasonable enough, particularly the first part. Note, however, the false equivalency between a zoonotic origin for the pandemic and “lab leak.” Also note the only person on this panel, which makes me wonder if they plan on adding someone else or if this will just be a talk. And who is this sole panelist? It’s Laura Kahn, Co-Founder, One Health Initiative.

I must confess that I wasn’t very familiar with Kahn, who is a physician and biosafety researcher with a book coming out in early October (surely another coincidence?) entitled One Health and the Politics of COVID-19. Some of the reviews suggest to me where she is coming from:

This book challenges One Health’s most pernicious dogma—that nature is necessarily deadlier than the consequences of human hubris. The book is especially courageous as it criticizes leading contemporary scientific powerholders who support unnecessarily risky virological work. Trust in science requires ethics and transparency.

Some of her social media posts suggest that, although she does emphasize zoonosis and how to prevent zoonotic spillover whenever possible, she is also rather open to lab lake conspiracy theories. I mean, Tweeting:

Let’s just say that treating anything Rand Paul says about COVID-19 as serious is not a good look for someone who purports to be evidence-based. Nor is credulously publicizing something like this from an anti-GMO group known for promoting lab leak conspiracy theories:

In addition, Googling found an article that she wrote for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in March 2022, The origins of SARS-CoV-2: still to be determined, in which she makes “lab leak”-adjacent arguments if not outright arguments for lab leak, denigrating two of the key papers published in 2022 that supported a zoonotic origin from the Wuhan animal markets, which both Steven Novella and I wrote about at the time.

Her take:

Two recent papers, Worobey et al. and Pekar et al., present geospacial analysis of animal stalls in the Huanan market and viral phylogenetic analysis but do not provide convincing evidence of natural spillover. The data and analyses discussed by Worobey are equally consistent with both hypotheses: (1) that SARS-CoV-2 first entered humans at the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan, and (2) that SARS-CoV-2 first entered humans at another location and was subsequently brought to the market and then amplified in the market by humans. The authors’ assertion that the data and analyses support only the natural spillover hypothesis is false.

Perhaps, but not really. The evidence in those papers is far more consistent with a SARS-CoV-2 spillover event at the Huanan Seafood Market, as Steve and I discussed. I also note that she wrote about the preprints, given that her article was published in March 2022 and the final versions of the papers were published in July 2022, honing in on one phrase that lab leak proponents really hated, to the point that they gloated over its removal in the final version of, first raging that the “hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 originated from a laboratory-related spillover—for example, from a laboratory-acquired infection—remains a viable possibility” before proclaiming:

Science is the objective pursuit of truth. Preventing future COVID-19 pandemics requires finding the truth. Premature, false declarations of “dispositive evidence” or “proof” does not generate public trust in science and does not protect public health.

That sure sounds like a lab leak proponent argument. As I pointed out, the use of that word in the preprint really ticked off lab leakers, to the point where they responded to its removal by gloating:

The real part of the article that raised my eyebrow, though, was in the Acknowledgements:

Kahn would like to thank Elisa Harris, Milton Leitenberg, and Richard Ebright for their invaluable comments, edits, and suggestions.

Richard Ebright? Yikes! He’s a Rutgers University chemistry professor who has been one of the most obnoxious and hostile lab leak proponents, he and his fellow lab leak believer microbiologist Bryce Nickels to scientists who publish in support of a zoonotic origin “fraudsters,” “liars,” “perjurers,” “felons,” “grifters,” “stooges,” “imbeciles,” and “murderers.” Milton Leitenberg has published with Ebright, in particular this lab leak-promoting An appeal for an objective, open, and transparent scientific debate about the origin of SARS-CoV-2 and published on his own Did the SARS-CoV-2 virus arise from a bat coronavirus research program in a Chinese laboratory? Very possibly., in which he denied that lab leak was a conspiracy theory. As for Elisa Harris, she was a cosignatory of an open letter to Nature Medicine, along with lab leak conspiracy theorists Alina Chan, Richard Ebright, and others demanding an expression of concern followed by retraction.

And…uh-oh:

This horrible NYT op-ed by Alina Chan (called “important” by Kahn) was full-on lab leak conspiracy theory, and I discussed why soon after it was published. It’s not for nothing that I’ve referred to Chan as the queen of lab leak conspiracy theories.

I’ve changed my mind. Kahn appears to be at least lab leak-adjacent. I’ve long argued that the current version of lab leak is primarily a conspiracy theory far more than it is a useful or valid scientific hypothesis (most recently three weeks ago), but on what can be gleaned from some Googling I don’t think Kahn is a hard core lab leak proponent. She does, however, seem, at minimum, a little too receptive to the idea given how little the actual scientific evidence supports it.

Stanford should be ashamed, but won’t be

Wrapping it all up is another Stanford Professor, Dr. John Ioannidis, because of course he is. Before the pandemic, Ioannidis was someone whom I admired. Unfortunately, since the pandemic, my opinion—and that of a lot of Ioannidis’ former admirers—soured. Why? Early in the pandemic Ioannidis was quick to embrace “natural herd immunity” approaches to COVID-19 that later became the basis of the Great Barrington Declaration. Again, the GBD was a strategy that never would have workedand didn’t work—and was profoundly social Darwinist. Although Ioannidis was not an author—indeed, in fairness he refused to sign it, although not based on disagreeing with the GBD’s premise but because of his opposition to “signing petitions” as a means of settling “questions of scientific fact”—his call early in the pandemic for what sure sounded like a variation on the idea of “focused protection” was all over the GBD. He was also a co-author, along with GBD co-author Jay Bhattacharya of the infamous Santa Clara seroprevalence study that misleadingly claimed that over 80 times more people had been exposed to COVID-19 than previously thought (and therefore the infection fatality rate, or IFR, was way lower than was being claimed, meaning COVID was not nearly as dangerous as claimed and therefore all those public health interventions were unnecessary). Ioannidis also made a vile evidence-free accusation that ICU doctors were inadvertently killing COVID patients by intubating them willy-nilly when the patients really didn’t need mechanical ventilation. And don’t even get me started on Ioannidis’ infamous “Kardashian index” paper, in which he smeared scientific critics and opponents of the GBD as “science Kardashians” using risibly bad methodology based on what was originally published as a satirical index to comment on scientists with more social media influence than influence in the scientific literature. Through it all, Ioannidis continues to treat theoretical death from a vaccine as being of more concern than actual death from COVID-19 and to falsely accuse expert panels whose conclusions he doesn’t like of “panel stacking.”

Sadly, it sounds like a very appropriate wrap-up for a conference so loaded with COVID-19 misinformers.

So what happened to Stanford? At the risk of comparing apples to oranges (although I don’t think I am), I liken it to the case of the Cleveland Clinic, an institution that is generally science- and evidence-based, but through ideology allowed in whole centers and institutes that support “integrating” quackery like “functional medicine,” acupuncturereiki, and others into conventional medicine. How that ideology got entrenched, I don’t know, but it remains so. As for Stanford, my best guess is that it is the right-wing libertarian/conservative influence of The Hoover Institution that attracts COVID-19 contrarians opposed to anything that can be cast as a “lockdown” or any other public health mandate.

The sad thing is, whatever good public health faculty there are at Stanford, their voices do not dominate. Rather, it is the voices of the worst of the worst contrarians, like Jay Bhattacharya, Eran Bendavid, John Ioannidis, and Scott Atlas who dominate the public discourse regarding public health science coming out of Stanford. This is a propaganda-fest masquerading as a legitimate conference on public health responses during a pandemic, and Stanford University ought to be ashamed for putting its imprimatur on the whole affair.



By Orac


Orac is the nom de blog of a humble surgeon/scientist who has an ego just big enough to delude himself that someone, somewhere might actually give a rodent's posterior about his copious verbal meanderings, but just barely small enough to admit to himself that few probably will. That surgeon is otherwise known as David Gorski.

That this particular surgeon has chosen his nom de blog based on a rather cranky and arrogant computer shaped like a clear box of blinking lights that he originally encountered when he became a fan of a 35 year old British SF television show whose special effects were renowned for their BBC/Doctor Who-style low budget look, but whose stories nonetheless resulted in some of the best, most innovative science fiction ever televised, should tell you nearly all that you need to know about Orac. (That, and the length of the preceding sentence.)

DISCLAIMER:: The various written meanderings here are the opinions of Orac and Orac alone, written on his own time. They should never be construed as representing the opinions of any other person or entity, especially Orac's cancer center, department of surgery, medical school, or university. Also note that Orac is nonpartisan; he is more than willing to criticize the statements of anyone, regardless of of political leanings, if that anyone advocates pseudoscience or quackery. Finally, medical commentary is not to be construed in any way as medical advice.

To contact Orac: oracknows@gmail.com

Global South cities lack cooling green spaces

charlotte north carolina
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Cities in the Global South are more exposed to extreme heat because they lack cooling green spaces, new research shows. The study found that Global South cities have just 70% of the "cooling capacity" provided by urban greenery in the Global North. The paper, published in the journal Nature Communications, is titled "Green infrastructure provides substantial but unequal urban cooling globally."

With temperatures rising, combined with the "urban heat island" effects that make cities hotter than , heat-related illness and death in cities are becoming more common. Urban green spaces can help reduce this risk,  down outdoor environments and providing vital refuges.

The research—led by an international team including Nanjing, Exeter, Aarhus and North Carolina State universities—finds there is "vast potential" to enhance urban cooling in the Global South and reduce inequality.

"Urban greenery is a really effective way of tackling what can be fatal effects of extreme heat and humidity," said Professor Tim Lenton, of the Global Systems Institute at the University of Exeter.

"Currently, the people dying due to climate change are often in the slums of cities in the Global South, such as the hottest parts of India. Our analysis suggests green spaces can cool the surface temperature in the average city by about 3°C during warm seasons—a vital difference during extreme heat."

The cooling effect of urban green spaces, especially urban forests, is caused by shading and transpirational cooling (evaporation of water).

The new study used satellite data on the world's 500  to assess "cooling capacity"—the extent to which  cool down a city's surface temperatures.

All of the top ten cities for cooling capacity are in the U.S., with Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham first, followed by Kansas and Baltimore. Many US cities have —leading to issues of urban "sprawl"—but this brings benefits in terms of green spaces and resulting cooling.

Mogadishu in Somalia is the city with the lowest cooling capacity, followed by Sana'a in Yemen and Rosario in Argentina. Chicago is fourth-lowest—the only US city on the list with cooling capacity below 1°C.

'Cooling benefit'

The Global South—which includes Africa, Latin America and much of Asia—contains the areas most at risk from extreme heat.

previous study found that current climate policies will leave more than a fifth of humanity exposed to dangerously hot temperatures by 2100, with the largest at-risk populations in India and Nigeria.

The new study assessed population density and location to estimate the "cooling benefit" received by the average citizen—as green areas are often found in the richer parts of a city.

Professor Chi Xu, of Nanjing University, said, "As well as Global South cities lagging behind in terms of cooling capacity, the cooling benefit for an average resident is 2.2°C—compared to 3.4°C for a city dweller in the Global North. The differences are mostly due to quantity of vegetation, but efficiency of cooling is also better in the Global North—possibly due to management of green spaces and different tree species."

Professor Jens-Christian Svenning, of the Center for Ecological Dynamics in a Novel Biosphere (ECONOVO) at Aarhus University, said, "The good news is that this nature-based solution to cooling can be substantially improved across the Global South, helping to tackle future heat stress for billions of people."

Professor Rob Dunn, of North Carolina State University, said, "It won't be easy to regreen cities. It can be expensive in the short-term. Yet, it will be key to making cities livable in the immediate future. Also, the key will be working to prevent the loss of green space in those cities that have it, or at least that have a little.

"Changes could include ground-level  and vertical and rooftop gardens, or even forests, to help protect city people from ."

More information: Green infrastructure provides substantial but unequal urban cooling globally, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51355-0


Journal information: Nature Communicatio


Provided by University of Exeter Rural belts around cities could reduce urban temperatures by up to 0.5°C, study suggests


Halal Crypto: could blockchain be a boost for Shariah-compliant finance?

Hamza Redzuan, Research Analyst, Qatar Centre for Global Banking and Finance

With the global Muslim population exceeding 1.8 billion, and increased demand for investment opportunities aligned with religious principles and community ethics and values, the global Islamic finance market is set to amount to 6.67 trillion U.S. dollars by 2027. Yet the substantial opportunity that this represents in the cryptocurrency space is still largely unexplored.

02 September 2024

'virtual' chains formed from binary code

While many traditional finance products are considered haram (non-permissible) to Muslims, a range of financial products enable Muslims to invest in accordance with Shariah (Islamic religious principles). These products take into account key principles such as the prohibition of exploitative actions, the promotion of honesty, and zakat, the requirement to give to charity.

Perhaps the best-known example of an Islamic financial product is sukuk, a financial certificate similar to a bond in Western finance. The traditional Western interest-paying bond structure with pre-determined payments, however, is not permissible in Islamic finance; the bond payments are considered to be riba (excessive gain – a form of exploitation) as the bond-holder avoids direct exposure to enterprise risk. Instead, sukuks are structured so that both the lender and borrower share the enterprise’s profits and losses, which means that investors can gain higher yields if the underlying asset appreciates, whereas conventional bondholders only receive returns based on the security’s original value.

Some cryptocurrencies are considered to be Shariah-compliant, but crypto has generally elicited mixed views in the Islamic world. Some scholars rule that investing in crypto is halal as long as the underlying project is halal, while others consider the whole category to be haram, as crypto characteristics, such as valuation based on market fluctuation and its use in gambling, are considered un-Islamic. For example, Indonesia's National Ulema Council prohibits crypto due to the “uncertainty, wagering and harm” surrounding it, issuing a fatwa (formal ruling or interpretation on a point of Islamic law given by a qualified legal scholar) in October 2021.

HelloGold (a gold-backed cryptocurrency originating in Malaysia) and Islamic Coin (an ethics-focused cryptocurrency) which operates on the HAQQ blockchain are examples of innovations aimed at addressing the concerns that some Islamic scholars have with cryptocurrencies generally.

Islamic Coin was privately financed by blockchain and fintech entrepreneurs to create an ethical and sharia-compliant financial service, while the HAQQ blockchain itself has been integrated with leading private and government-affiliated services in the UAE. Furthermore, establishing a Sharia board comprising five of the region’s top experts and 40 banks, including well-known institutions like Standard Chartered, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, and Dubai Islamic Bank enables Islamic Coin to accurately assess project compliance with Islamic principles.

As blockchain technology is distinct from cryptocurrencies, it has a much wider potential application in the halal investment space. Sukuk can be tokenized and considered Sharia-compliant as being recorded on the blockchain is equated to greater transparency, helping buyers to assess issuer credibility and make informed investment choices. Furthermore, blockchain-based assets benefit from higher security as all transactions, profits and real-time information are communicated to investors.

Previously, the development of Sharia-compliant bonds, achieved through structures such as risk-sharing for lenders and linking Sukuk repayment to underlying asset performance, has enabled Muslim investors to participate in this asset class. For tokenized bonds, there are various modifications potential workarounds that can be implemented for the same purpose:

  • Emphasising Zakat principles such as on the HAQQ blockchain network where the fact that 10% of new coins go to Evergreen DAO for Islamic charity helps to avoid interest and unethical projects.
  • Backing tokenized bonds with halal assets (e.g. gold or real estate) and using secure, transparent blockchains with transactions recorded & verified by a network of nodes.
  • Adhering to general ethical principles such as fairness, transparency and social responsibility ensures the tokens are not used for illegal or unethical activities, like money laundering. A team of experts in Islamic finance and blockchain must also be brought in to ensure compliance with Islamic law.
  • The transaction needs to be centred around promoting economic activity rather than making money out of money.

Smart contracts

As well as using blockchain to enable transparency and cryptography to safeguard individual transactions, ensuring that they are ethical and follow Sharia guidelines, Islamic Coin has made innovative use of smart contracts. Smart contracts are similar to regular contracts, but with terms established as code on the blockchain which cannot be changed. This increases transparency, security and trust and aligns with Islamic law’s emphasis on fulfilling contracts as mentioned in the Quran.

For example, Blossom Finance's Smart Sukuk links the cryptocurrency ecosystem with the real economy by using a contract-based Sukuk to invest in small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) in Indonesia, increasing investment and financial inclusion. Smart contracts and blockchain could also enhance the performance of certain aspects such as zakat (charity), by introducing transparency, automation, and reducing time costs. Raheb (2020) devised a funding model that integrates blockchain and smart contracts with zakat management, aiming to identify potential zakat payers thus improving overall zakat collection.

The future for ‘halal crypto’

So what does the future hold for halal crypto?

Halal crypto” is not limited to Muslim-majority countries, or indeed buyers (for example, over half of the Islamic Coin’s private sales involved non-Muslim participants, presumably attracted by the product’s ethics) but globally it has yet to become a mainstream, fully financially regulated product. In many countries, financial regulators’ oversight of crypto assets of any kind is restricted to adherence to anti-money laundering requirements. By contrast, in Malaysia, halal crypto is regulated by the Securities Commission (SC) and companies raising funds in this way must conduct an Initial Exchange Offering on an approved digital asset exchange platform. But while in more crypto-friendly regulatory regimes there is a precedent for making halal crypto a more mainstream, regulated asset class, there is still much work to be done to ensure investor confidence in their compliance with Islamic law.

We have seen that smart contracts and the blockchain can help digitised sukuk to align with Islamic values through contract fulfilment, transparency and fairness, but a council of scholars well-versed to develop Sharia-compliance guidelines for tokenized bonds would still be greatly beneficial. In the cryptocurrency space, the debate over whether such a product can be deemed halal continues.

In many countries – both Muslim and non-Muslim – the interaction of crypto with existing regulatory frameworks has been complicated and often controversial. Anti-money-laundering and investor protection laws alone make the spread of crypto difficult and the requirement of Sharia compliance adds more nuance. Nevertheless, important progress is being made. For example, in Malaysia, halal crypto is regulated by the Securities Commission and companies raising funds in this way must conduct an Initial Exchange Offering on an approved digital asset exchange platform.

Despite these ongoing discussions, however, with the rise of Islamic cryptocurrency exchanges such as HelloGold and Islamic Coin, there is now certainly more guidance and regulation for Muslims looking to invest in crypto assets in a way that aligns with their principles.

 

References

Statista: Worldwide value of Islamic Finance assets

King's Business Review: Sukuk: the halal bond

Saturna Capital: What makes Sukuk Halal?

Reuters: Abu Dhabi's Al Hilal Bank uses blockchain to sell sukuk in secondary market

Reuters: Saudi-based ICD eyes blockchain-based tool for Islamic banks

Press release: Islamic Coin and Haqq Blockchain ink major agreements in medical care, travel, wellness and immigration services

Coin Telegraph: IMF examines CBDC design in context of Islamic Banking, finds some risks magnified

Freeman Law: Malaysia and Cryptocurrency

Arabian Business: Islamic Coin: World’s first Sharia compliant cryptocurrency to launch in May, co-founder reveals

Nasdaq.com:  How Cryptocurrency Aligns with the Principles of Islamic Banking and Finance

Stobox: Why security tokens are Shariah-compliant crypto instruments

Alami Institute: How NFT and Smart Contract Could Impact Islamic Finance

Coin Telegraph: Indonesia’s national Islamic council reportedly declares Bitcoin haram

Coin Telegraph: Malaysian SC Shariah Advisory Council praises crypto’s ‘great potential’

Felix Kevin on Medium.com: Islamic Coin’s Legitimacy as a Sharia-Compliant Cryptocurrency Is Proven by Its Fatwa

Kareem Ibrahim Olamilekan on Medium.com: Evaluating the Security and Transparency of Islamic Coin’s Blockchain Technology

LCX.com: Tokenized Bond Investing for Smart Portfolio Management

Quardus.com: Is Bitcoin Halal: Sharia Rules and Interpretation

International Journal of Zakat: Blockchain and Smart Contract Application for Zakat Institution

 


    Why repairing forests is not just about planting trees

    An exploration of deforestation and restoration shows that woods are much more than trees. They depend on — and provide for — people, animals and microbes.

    BOOK REVIEW
    02 September 2024
    By Debraj Manna

    Indigenous peoples use plants grown in the Amazon rainforest as medicinal herbs. Credit: Ricardo Oliveira/AFP/Getty

    Treewilding: Our Past, Present and Future Relationship with Forests Jake Robinson Pelagic (2024)

    Trees first appeared around 400 million years ago. They survived the mass-extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs some 66 million years ago and lived through several glacial periods during which ice covered up to one-quarter of Earth’s land. Now, they face another threat: humans.

    Since the birth of agriculture, people have been clearing forests to make space for crops and livestock. Over the past 300 years, 1.5 billion hectares of forest have been lost — equivalent to around 37% of today’s total forest cover. This has resulted in biodiversity loss, desertification and increased flooding risks. Deforestation has also been linked to an increased chance of disease outbreaks, because people come into contact more often with animals, such as bats, that carry potential pathogens and whose habitats have been destroyed.

    In Treewilding, microbial ecologist Jake Robinson explores how we can best protect existing forests from deforestation and restore those that have been lost, while acknowledging that some degree of deforestation is inevitable. His meticulous explanations and vivid descriptions make this book a must-read.


    Greener cities: a necessity or a luxury?


    Robinson questions whether just planting trees is the solution to deforestation. Although tree-planting initiatives have been going on since the Second World War, they have exploded since the turn of the century. The public has become increasingly aware that trees can help to prevent soil erosion and desiccation, and are crucial to mitigating climate change by sequestering carbon. Globally, the area of planted forests rose from 170 million hectares in 1990 to 293 million hectares in 2020. Tree-planting initiatives are used by many organizations to ‘greenwash’ their high carbon footprints — making them seem environmentally friendly when they are not. However, unless thoroughly researched and well implemented, tree planting can do more harm than good to ecosystems.

    Often, only one type of tree is planted across swathes of land. Such monocultures reduce biodiversity, in terms of plant species and the wildlife and microorganisms associated with them. Because trees of the same species are susceptible to the same diseases, a whole forest can be wiped out at once. Moreover, non-native trees can be invasive species, disrupting delicately balanced local ecosystems.
    Regenerate forests to restore them

    To solve rather than compound environmental crises, Robinson argues, a more informed approach is needed. Regulators must understand the deep connections that trees and forests share with people, animals and microbes.

    He speaks to Forrest Fleischman, a scholar of forest and environmental policy, who underscores how Indigenous peoples depend on forests for subsistence farming and grazing animals. High-income countries contribute the most to climate change, yet tree-planting initiatives risk unfairly displacing Indigenous people in low-income countries, says Fleischman. He proposes that people should not just plant trees but ‘grow’ them. This means knowing what species suit an area and how they are connected to the lives of the local people and wildlife. Growers should make use of local knowledge and spend time and money caring for young trees

    .
    The Great Green Wall project aims to reforest a belt of land across the Sahara desert.
    Credit: TCD/Prod.DB/Alamy

    Robinson details a range of forest-restoration projects that fit this brief. The ‘Great Green Wall’ project, for instance, aims to grow a belt of trees nearly 8,000 kilometres long and 15 kilometres wide across the Sahara Desert, along a route that was forested 50 years ago. If successful, it could prevent the southward expansion of the desert by reducing land degradation; increasing the amount of arable land, the crop yield and the availability of jobs; and sequestering millions of tonnes of carbon. Several million trees have been planted since 2007. But funding has dried up, and the author cautions that more money must be found if the Great Green Wall is to succeed.

    Another admirable restoration project is Western Australia’s Gondwana Link, which aims to reduce vegetation loss by reconnecting small patches of previously linked forest across 1,000 kilometres. This should help species at risk of extinction in isolated patches to endure. It could increase the chance of survival for birds, such as the Australasian bittern (Botaurus poiciloptilus) and hooded plover (Charadrius cucullatus), and plants, including the Corackerup marlock (Eucalyptus vesiculosa). When populations that are currently separated can intermix, their genetic diversity is improved. This can help to protect them against environmental adversity. Since 2002, the project has planted 14,500 hectares of land, funded in part by investors who receive carbon credits or tax exemptions in return.

    The author also describes his own work in ecoacoustics. The approach uses the sounds made by organisms including birds and bats to explore the composition of and changes in ecosystems. Working with bioacoustics specialist Carlos Abrahams, Robinson is studying soil biodiversity to track forest restoration. As forests are rejuvenated, they’ve found, the number of invertebrates hidden in the soil increases, producing a “subterranean soundscape — a hidden orchestra of life”.



    Wood — the vein that runs through human history


    Robinson ultimately concludes that natural regeneration — leaving a damaged woodland to repair itself — is one of the best ways to restore forests. He compares this phenomenon to a phoenix: “Just as the mythical bird is reborn from its own ashes, a forest can regenerate from the remnants of its own destruction.”

    I was hooked by Robinson’s ability to paint rich pictures of beautiful scenery. Arriving at a restored forest on a limestone cliff in the Peak District, UK, for example, he sees “a vast sea of greater knapweed glancing down at me from the edge like floral guardians in a watchtower”. The soil underfoot is “a bed of compressed and mineralised marine creature skeletons from bygone eras”.

    And I enjoyed the thought-provoking questions raised throughout. For instance, to what extent can people alive today understand what the baseline state of the environment should be, given how rapidly human activity is changing the world? And how do jays (Garrulus glandarius) — voracious acorn eaters — understand that they need to set aside some nuts to help to regenerate the oaks they depend on for nutrition? The birds probably simply forget that they’ve hoarded caches of food, but Robinson speaks to several scientists who have found evidence that hoarding is an intelligent, rather than hard-wired, behaviour. This exploration exemplifies the author’s ability to avoid bias as he explores delicate subjects, despite his clear passion for them.

    Treewilding effortlessly integrates current theories with fresh insights and consolidates strands of research into a coherent narrative that should encourage researchers to come up with better ways to help forests. It is an enlightening journey for anyone interested in the science of nature.

    Nature 633, 30-31 (2024)

    doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-02834-3