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Let’s Create an Elite Scientific Body to Advise on Global Catastrophes

Call it the Science Readiness Reserves—a group that will anticipate and prepare for rare but disastrous events such as pandemics, asteroid strikes, and more

Refrigerated trucks to store the bodies of COVID-19 victims is a sign of our utter unpreparedness.

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American


The COVID-19 pandemic has taken scientists to the forefront of press conferences, temporarily thrusting them into the spotlight. We hope that this race to find a cure will be a wake-up call, as dramatic as the race to the moon half a century ago—inspiring our society and political system to better recognize the value of science as a shield against global catastrophes.

We have to find a better way to harness the power of science to keep our world safe. Not only will science help us defeat the deadly coronavirus, but it will also be instrumental in tackling other major threats like climate change and antibiotic resistance. Science is vital for our future prosperity and health; it always has been and always will be.

No matter how hard we try, “known unknowns” like pandemics will continue to befall our world. To outwit them, we must boost our scientific efforts before we face yet another new virus, or a wide-scale drought, or an especially devastating earthquake—or even an asteroid impact. If a meteor similar to the one that hit the unpopulated regions near Chelyabinsk in 2013 or Tunguska in 1908 hit New York City, it could cause a larger death toll and economic damage than COVID-19. Or consider the impact of a blob of hot gas from the sun, a so-called coronal mass ejection, of the type that missed the Earth in 2012. Such an event could shut off communication systems, disable satellites and damage power grids.


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Are we prepared for these rare but real risks? The global response to COVID-19 has clearly been a learning experience. The pandemic is a once-in-a-century event that has not been experienced during the lifetime of even our oldest politicians and scientists. By now it is abundantly clear that a proper scientific readiness for such natural catastrophes is key to saving millions of lives and trillions of dollars in the global economy. We should be ready to adequately address known unknowns so that they are better understood before they harm us.

In exploring what scientific readiness ought to look like, we could look for inspiration in how the military plans for “known unknowns.” Approaches include enacting different scenarios to plan ahead for futures we do not wish for, but for which we must prepare. Reservists have specialized training, access to common resources, and institutional support. It is a construct that is used the world over to ensure a country is prepared for the unexpected, has a protective infrastructure, will use a contingency plan for a proper response, and can flexibly meet spikes in demand.

We believe that now is the time to create a new scientific body, the Science Readiness Reserves, composed of scientists and organizations that voluntarily choose to take part. They would bring together the best from the public and the private sectors, recognizing that the scientific capacity of any member nation is distributed across government, academia, foundations and industry. The COVID-19 crisis has led to inspirational examples of coalitions across the research and development community, but these were created without the benefit of advance planning. Crises and emergencies demand alternative leadership, funding and coordination mechanisms across institutions.

Through planning during moments of tranquility, the Science Reserves would be ready and able to mobilize the proper resources when the emergencies arrive. The international dimension is also crucial, as researchers from a variety of disciplines and nations would be able to spot, prepare and respond to threats—sharing information in real time and providing a global coordination mechanism to quickly get together scientific expertise and resources.

That, and better investment in fundamental research, will inevitably pay off in the long term. There is no better avenue for international cooperation than science, which is an infinite-sum game rather than a zero-sum one. Our major risks are global and so should be our cooperative response. Let the COVID-19 pandemic serve as our moon-landing moment. If humanity ever needed a wake-up call to recognize the value of scientific readiness and collaboration, surely this pandemic is it.  

Avi Loeb is former chair (2011-2020) of the astronomy department at Harvard University, founding director of Harvard's Black Hole Initiative and director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. He also chairs the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Academies and the advisory board for the Breakthrough Starshot project, and is a member of President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. Loeb is the bestselling author of Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt).

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Dario Gil is the director of IBM Research, one of the world's largest and most influential corporate research labs, with over 3,000 scientists at 19 locations on six continents. He is the 12th Director in its 75-year history. He leads innovation efforts at IBM, directing research strategies in AI, Cloud, Quantum and Exploratory Science. He is a founder and co-chair of the COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium.

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