Sure, just coincidental Wuhan is next door to large concentrations of bat species.
The Bats Behind the Pandemic, Wall Street Journal, April 9, 2021 ( Link )
None of this occurred before the Americans (the world's biggest polluters) used
Agent Orange in Vietnam. One of the earliest viruses was found in Australia in 1970.
The 1918 Spanish Flu was discovered by Spain but didn't originate in Spain. It originated in North America and was brought to Europe by US soldiers during WWI.
The same MAY be true of Covid-19 and it's discovery in Wuhan.
It's certainly plausible that the virus escaped from a Lab in Wuhan but it hasn't been emphasized enough that we still don't know when or where the jump from animal to human happened.
An outbreak from a Lab in Wuhan beginning in November 2019 seems unlikely and implausible based on the scientific evidence...
Researchers found that the closest type of coronavirus to the one discovered in bats –
type A, the original human virus genome – was present in Wuhan, but was not the city’s predominant virus type. Mutated versions of A were seen in Americans reported to have lived in Wuhan, and a large number of A-type viruses were found in patients from the US and Australia. Wuhan’s major virus type was B and was prevalent in patients from across east Asia, however it didn’t travel much beyond the region without further mutations.
The researchers say the C variant is the major European type, found in early patients from France, Italy, Sweden and England.
Read more:
https://metro.co.uk/2020/04/10/coronavirus-mutated-three-distinct-strains-spread-across-world-12536852/?ito=cbshare-------------------
Based on the genetic data, it appears that Covid-19 originated somewhere else in China and mutated to "Type-B" which caused the major outbreak in Wuhan.