Hello Nature readers,Today we learn that China has joined the international vaccine coalition COVAX, enjoy rediscovering the work that won this yearâs science Nobels and hear what Germanyâs leading pandemic scientist says about whatâs to come.
China announced today that it will join COVAX, the international coalition that aims to fairly distribute COVID-19 vaccines. The effort â run by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance; the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations; and the World Health Organization â wants to provide 2 billion vaccine doses to the most-vulnerable people and to health-care workers, especially in poor countries. Some 80 wealthy countries have committed to support the initiative, with the notable exception of the United States. It is not clear yet whether China will commit money or vaccines, and how much.
This week, a giant fire in northern California reached âgigafireâ status. It burnt more than one million acres over weeks â the largest wildfire the state has ever seen. âIt makes up more than all of the fires that occurred between 1932 and 1999,â said Gavin Newsom, the stateâs governor. âIf thatâs not proof-point testament to climate change, I donât know what is.â California experienced its hottest August on record this year, after years of below-average rainfall. These factors contributed to ideal conditions for the worst fire season the state has ever recorded; 4 million acres have burnt so far.
Itâs Nobelâs week! Half the fun of which is rediscovering the work that has taken home the prize this year â and the fascinating scientists behind it. Microbiologist Emmanuelle Charpentier and biochemist Jennifer Doudna shared the chemistry Nobel for developing the precise genome-editing technology CRISPR.
Virologists Harvey Alter, Michael Houghton and Charles Rice shared the medicine Nobel for research on hepatitis C, the virus responsible for many cases of hepatitis and liver disease.
Mathematical physicist Roger Penrose shared the Nobel prize in physics with astronomers Andrea Ghez and Reinhard Genzel, who discovered a giant black hole in the centre of the Galaxy.
This week, the Nature Podcast speaks to Lauren Wolf, the US bureau chief of Natureâs news team, and our US-based reporter Jeff Tollefson about why Nature must cover politics and whatâs at stake in the upcoming US presidential election. âI think the short answer is: everything,â says Tollefson, who wrote a feature on how Trump damaged science, and why it could take decades to recover. The coronavirus pandemic has put a harsh spotlight on the connections between science, politics and policy, he says. âThis touches on public health, it touches on just how science is used across the US government, it touches on issues of scientific integrity â and frankly it touches on issues of democracy.â Plus, the podcast explores whether maternal behaviours are learned or innate, and I drop in to chat about the Nobel winners.
Virologist Christian Drosten, who is leading Germanyâs response to the COVID-19 pandemic, addresses everything from testing strategies to whether to eat inside a restaurant in a wide-ranging interview with Die Zeit. âI think we need to start preparing people now for a vaccine that may not be perfect,â he says. He also looks forward to returning to his normal life as an anonymous scientist. âI hope that people will then forget about me, that in a few yearsâ time, newspapers will write a âWhere Are They Now?â story about Christian Drosten.â
Today, our favourite flightless adventurer is hiding out at the thermal springs of Pamukkale in southwest Turkey. Can you find Leif Penguinson? The answer will be in Mondayâs e-mail, all thanks to Briefing photo editor and penguin wrangler Tom Houghton. Yesterday I wrote that chemist Mario Molina was Mexicoâs only Nobel laureate. He was of course the countryâs only science Nobel winner. Diplomat and politician Alfonso Garcia Robles was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1982, for his work on nuclear disarmament. And author and diplomat Octavio Paz won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1990. Iâm sorry for the error and Iâm grateful to all of you who flagged it. This newsletter is always evolving â tell us what you think! Please send your feedback to
briefing@nature.com. Flora Graham, senior editor, Nature Briefing With contributions by Nicky Phillips
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