Five years ago, on January 11, 2020, a new form of coronavirus claimed its first victim in China. And the world was about to experience Covid-19 very closely. The lockdowns are now over, the pandemic has once again become an epidemic, and the world’s economies are trying to get back on track. But is the world ready for another pandemic?
“The answer is yes and no”
Is the world better prepared than in 2020? “The answer is yes and no,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the WHO, an organization that has been at the heart of the battle against Covid-19, recently said. “If the next pandemic occurred today, the world would still face some of the same weaknesses and vulnerabilities. » “But it has also learned many painful lessons from the pandemic and taken important steps to strengthen its defenses,” he said.
According to Maria Van Kerkhove, the American epidemiologist who heads the Department of Prevention and Preparedness for Epidemics and Pandemics at the WHO, “many things have improved thanks to the 2009 influenza pandemic (H1N1, Editor’s note), but also thanks to Covid”. “But I think the world is not ready for another pandemic or mass epidemic,” she said.
“The world is not ready”
The group of independent experts for pandemic preparedness and response, created by the WHO, says it bluntly: “In 2025, the world is not ready to fight a new pandemic threat”, due to the inequalities that persist in access to financing and tools to fight pandemics, such as vaccines. Dutch virologist Marion Koopmans explained to AFP that the success and speed of production of vaccines based on the messenger RNA (mRNA) technique could be a “game changer” during the next global health crisis.
But she worries that their use in the face of a future threat will encounter “major problems”, particularly because of the “staggering” level of disinformation. And Tom Peacock, virologist at Imperial College London, considers that the possibility of an H5N1 avian flu pandemic must be taken “very seriously”. For the moment, the virus is not transmitted between humans but it circulates massively in many animal species.
“I don’t think we are any more prepared than we were with Covid,” Meg Schaeffer, epidemiologist at the American SAS institute, told AFP. She estimates it would take another four to five years for public health authorities to detect and share information more quickly. But she has “confidence” in the lessons learned by the population during Covid-19 to protect themselves, such as social distancing and wearing a mask.
Concrete progress
Inaugurated in 2021 in Berlin, the new WHO center on pandemic prevention is dedicated to collecting intelligence to better detect and mitigate threats. Born in 2022, the World Bank’s Pandemic Fund has so far approved financing worth $885 million, allocated to nearly 50 projects covering 75 countries.
-A technology transfer center for mRNA vaccines was inaugurated in South Africa in 2023 with the support in particular of the WHO, as well as in 2022 a global training center for biomanufacturing in South Korea to stimulate production local pharmaceutical company.
We are talking about a “pandemic”
On January 30, 2020, the WHO declared that Covid-19 constituted a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC), its highest level of alert but with too bureaucratic sounds. And most countries and the general public only reacted when the head of the WHO first used the much more evocative term “pandemic” on March 11, 2020.
To trigger more effective international collaboration, WHO member countries agreed on the concept of a “pandemic emergency”, now the highest level of global alert.
A treaty approaching?
In December 2021, WHO member countries decided to develop an agreement on pandemic prevention and preparedness to avoid serious Covid mistakes. But major questions remain unanswered, including that of sharing data on emerging pathogens and the resulting benefits, namely vaccines, tests and treatments but also pandemic surveillance. The negotiators gave themselves May 2025 as a deadline to reach consensus.
Our file on Covid-19
In addition, more than 200 scientists from more than 50 countries evaluated data on 1,652 pathogens – mainly viruses – allowing the WHO to draw up this year a list of around 30 pathogens likely to cause future pandemics, such as such as Covid-19, Lassa fever and the Ebola, Zika and Marburg viruses.