2023-06-22

BRUSSELS - Twenty years ago, the first SARS outbreak sounded the alarm. But Europe failed to prepare for the Covid-19 pandemic due to a lack of funding for drug research, and may still be unprepared for the next one, argue several prominent scientists interviewed by Stefano Valentino and Gian Paolo Accardo.

The European Union (EU) has spent billions of euros fighting the Covid crisis, but only a few million trying to prevent it, failing precisely because of a lack of funding for research. Far more lives and economic losses could have been saved if decision-makers in Brussels had stuck to the investment strategy for drug development introduced after the first SARS outbreak in 2003. In the period between the two outbreaks, not only in Europe but around the world, public coffers had invested taxpayers' money in several SARS research projects, including both drugs and vaccines, which ultimately never came to public fruition due to funding cuts. When the pandemic began and public funding became available again, some of these promising projects were resumed and their inhibitors proved to be somewhat effective against Covid, showing that sustained research efforts could have made a difference. Two decades after the first SARS, such a short-sighted, emergency-based approach still seems to prevail, potentially leaving European citizens vulnerable to future threats.

Stefano Valentino

Stefano Valentino is a Brussels-based freelance investigative journalist.
Stefano Valentino

Gian Paolo Accardo

Italian-Dutch journalist Gian Paolo Accardo is co-founder and editor-in-chief of Voxeurop.
Gian Paolo Accardo
€7,800 allocated on 13/12/2021
ID
SCI/2021/015
Grant
FPD Science