This article urges economic stimulus efforts to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic in ways that address linked and urgent global issues, including health, air pollution, climate change and sustainable development. The authors, including SEI Research Leader Johan C.I. Kuylenstierna and SEI Research Associate Lisa Emberson, are members of the Scientific Advisory Panel of the Climate and Clean Air Coalition and other invited experts. The authors represent 16 research organizations, including SEI.
The article urges the scientific and policy communities to work together to use the pandemic recovery period to spur transformational change that can address urgent, linked global issues. The authors argue that the acute challenge of the global pandemic should not compromise “efforts to tackle the world’s inescapable, linked, and ongoing challenges of climate change, poor air quality, unsustainable development, and the loss of biodiversity”.
“How we decide to stimulate the economy in response to the Covid-19 virus can have enormous impacts on these longstanding global threats,” the authors note. “As governments apply economic stimulus efforts, it is more important than ever that these make the connection between health, air pollution, climate, and the environment. By addressing climate, air pollution, and sustainable development as an integrated problem, we can identify technologies, lifestyle changes, and policy solutions which achieve multiple near-term benefits efficiently, sustainably, and often at lower cost than solutions that no not consider both the economy and the environment.”
The authors identify solutions that can deliver economic and social objectives and, at the same time, protect air and climate. They outline eight categories that warrant investment and attention:
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