Synergies Between COVID-19 and Climate Change Impacts and Responses

Author:

Pelling Mark1,Kerr Rachel Bezner2,Biesbroek Robert3,Caretta Martina Angela4,Cissé Guéladio56,Costello Mark John78,Ebi Kristie L.9,Gunn Elena Lopez10,Parmesan Camille111213,Schuster-Wallace Corinne J.14,Tirado Maria Cristina1516,van Aalst Maarten1718,Woodward Alistair19

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography King’s College London, UK

2. Department of Global Development, Cornell University, United States

3. Public Administration and Policy Group, Wageningen University, the Netherlands

4. Human Geography Department, Lund University, Sweden

5. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland

6. University of Basel, CH-4003 Basel, Switzerland

7. Faculty of Bioscience and Aquaculture, Nord Universitet, 8049 Bodø, Norway

8. School of Environment, University of Auckland, New Zealand

9. Center for Health and the Global Environment (CHanGE), University of WashingtonSeattle, USA

10. Director of ICATALIST, Spain

11. Theoretical and Experimental Ecology (SETE), CNRS, France

12. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Texas at Austin, USA

13. School of Biological and Marine Sciences, Plymouth University, UK

14. Department of Geography and Planning, Centre for Hydrology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada

15. United Nations World Food Program, Rome, Italy

16. University of California, Institute of Environment and Sustainability, LA, USA

17. Faculty of Geo-information Science and Earth Observation, University of Twente, Enschede, the Netherlands

18. Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, The Hague, the Netherlands International Research Institute for Climate and Society Columbia University, New York NY, USA

19. School of Population Health, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic and anthropogenic climate change are global crises. We show how strongly these crises are connected, including the underlying societal inequities and problems of poverty, substandard housing, and infrastructure including clean water supplies. The origins of all these crises are related to modern consumptive industrialisation, including burning of fossil fuels, increasing human population density, and replacement of natural with human dominated ecosystems. Because business as usual is unsustainable on all three fronts, transformative responses are needed. We review the literature on risk management interventions, implications for COVID-19, for climate change risk and for equity associated with biodiversity, water and WaSH, health systems, food systems, urbanization and governance. This paper details the considerable evidence base of observed synergies between actions to reduce pandemic and climate change risks while enhancing social justice and biodiversity conservation. It also highlights constraints imposed by governance that can impede deployment of synergistic solutions. In contrast to the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, governance systems have procrastinated on addressing climate change and biodiversity loss as these are interconnected chronic crises. It is now time to address all three to avoid a multiplication of future crises across health, food, water, nature, and climate systems.

Funder

Climate Change 6th Assessment Report

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd

Subject

General Medicine

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