World Economic Forum pushes climate vaccines

The World Economic Forum is calling for the production of vaccines to protect against “climate change.”

In an article last week, World Economic Forum (WEF) Centre for Health and Healthcare Head Shyam Bishem noted that for the first time in 28 years, the United Nations will dedicate a day during its annual Climate Summit (COP28) this December to the impact of “climate change” on health.

According to the UN’s One Health agenda, “climate change” is the driving factor behind human health. For example, warmer climates can fuel tick infestations which can bring with them deadly diseases, and changing weather patterns can cause avian flu spread.

Therefore, the One Health agenda states that because pandemic diseases are zoonotic — they spread from animals to humans — human health must be viewed in the context of animals and the environment, or what is called the “human-animal-environment interface.”

“Vector-borne diseases – those carried by organisms like mosquitoes and ticks – account for more than 17% of all infectious diseases and kill more than 700,000 people annually, according to the WHO,” wrote Bishem in last week’s article, also co-authored by partners from management consulting firm Oliver Wyman. “Extreme climate and weather patterns such as droughts, heatwaves, floods and rainfall extend breeding seasons and territory for mosquitoes, ticks and other vectors.

“This means climate change could help spread viruses like malaria, dengue and Zika to higher latitudes and expose more people. A 2019 research study found that by 2050, the two primary disease-spreading mosquitoes will significantly expand their range, posing a threat to 49% of the world’s population,” the article continued.

The WEF further warns that global warming causes wildfires which causes air pollution which can cause respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, and all climate disasters will cause a decline in mental health.

Alongside the UN, the WEF has established its own Climate and Health Initiative which is “tackling the climate-health connection” by “shaping high-impact solutions,” which include vaccines.

“We can act now to bolster the infrastructure and push the vaccines that should be developed or drugs that need more production capacity,” the WEF concluded.

Earlier this month a study warned that “climate change” and deforestation will cause an exponential increase in deaths from certain viruses. The researchers, who work for Ginkgo Bioworks — a major biotech firm backed by globalist billionaire Bill Gates — also suggested mRNA injections as a measure to mitigate the impact of global warming.

Vaccine makers have also been calling for vaccinations as a “critical response to the climate crisis.” 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.”

Through the World Health Organization (WHO), the UN has been warning about “climate pandemics.” In May the WHO struck a $5 million partnership with the Rockefeller Center to “discover” diseases caused by the weather.