UK developing vaccines for next pandemic
Scientists in a British high-security laboratory are developing vaccines for a new pandemic involving “Disease X.”
Disease X is a term created by the World Health Organization (WHO) to refer to an unknown virus. The pathogen has yet to be determined, but Sky News reports that the top candidates for Disease X are avian flu, monkeypox, hantavirus and Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF). Scientists at the Porton Down Vaccine Development and Evaluation Centre in Wiltshire are developing vaccines for all.
But whereas the COVID-19 injections were developed in less than a year, Sky News reports there is a “global effort” to develop a vaccine for the next pandemic within only 100 days.
"Historically, that would be unheard of," said UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) Professor Dame Jenny Harries. "It would normally take five or 10 years. For COVID it was around 360 days. So this is a really high ambition. But for some viruses, it is definitely possible."
And as scientists work on developing a vaccine, the WHO is working on developing international vaccine passports.
The WHO announced in June the launch of its “digital health partnership” with the European Commission that will involve development of global vaccine passports among other “digital products to deliver better health for all.” According to the organization, the passport system will allow “global mobility” and protect people not only from “future health threats” but those that are “on-going.”
Ultimately, the next pandemic will be decided by the WHO. But while the virus still remains unknown, “health experts” have already declared it will be caused by “climate change.”
"What we're seeing is a rising risk globally,” said Harries, adding, "And some of it is because of climate change where you get things like ticks and mosquitoes moving to where it was previously cold and is now becoming increasingly warm.”
Pirbright Institute Director Professor Bryan Charleston has also warned about a “slow march north” of deadly diseases due to “climate change.”
“There are broadly two (points), one is that the insect vectors will move, greatly increasing the range of their habitat because of climate change and we are seeing that,” said Charleston.
Vaccine makers have also been calling for vaccinations against “climate change.” Pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca in June declared “climate change” to be a public health crisis, sparking concerns that the pharma industry may play a role in climate mandates. His remarks came two months after drugmaker Sanofi’s Executive Vice President of Vaccines Thomas Triomphe penned an article titled “Vaccine innovation is a critical response to the climate crisis”.
The WHO has been setting the stage for a “climate change”-caused pandemic with its One Health agenda, which links such viruses to “climate change." Because pandemic diseases are zoonotic and spread from animals to humans, human health must be looked at in the context of animals and the environment or what is called the “human-animal-environment interface.” A zoonotic outbreak, therefore, would open the door for climate mandates and forced vaccinations to stop the spread.
The One Health approach has been endorsed by the World Economic Forum (WEF), which praised the ideology’s focus on “climate change”:
We will have a better chance of suppressing infectious diseases only if we adopt what the WHO calls a One Health approach and integrate predictive modelling and surveillance used in both infectious disease control and climate change.
In March, globalist governments met with the WHO in Geneva to negotiate a “Pandemic Accord” that will bind all countries to the One Health approach. The Pandemic Accord requires governments to “address the drivers of the emergence and re-emergence of disease at the human-animal-environment interface, including but not limited to climate change, land use change, wildlife trade, desertification and antimicrobial resistance."
Notably, Sky News has openly committed to “programming” viewers to change their lifestyles for “climate change.”