The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains

The coronavirus pandemic has had some unexpected benign effects (including a large drop in air pollution and levels of nitrogen oxides in UK and elsewhere, and a smaller drop in global carbon emissions), which raises the problem of how to sustain and build on these unexpected gains. These gains coul...

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Main Author: Robin Attfield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Tabriz 2020-11-01
Series:Philosophical Investigations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://philosophy.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_11555_5b7ad9df15924d293ecb9831b9a38ffb.pdf
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spelling doaj-7f6541f1114b4ba09de7c67a57ddc5f92020-12-20T09:08:24ZengUniversity of TabrizPhilosophical Investigations2251-79602423-44192020-11-011432485410.22034/jpiut.2020.1155511555The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected GainsRobin Attfield0Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Cardiff University, UKThe coronavirus pandemic has had some unexpected benign effects (including a large drop in air pollution and levels of nitrogen oxides in UK and elsewhere, and a smaller drop in global carbon emissions), which raises the problem of how to sustain and build on these unexpected gains. These gains could easily be lost when economies and road transport return to something like their previous condition. But if governments and industries are inspired to reduce automobile emissions to match the levels of the spring of 2020, gains such as these could become recurrent, and many more lives could be saved. Further, if (with greater effort) carbon emissions could remain reduced, then future generations could be saved from sea-level rise, extreme weather events, and even from the spread of tropical diseases. Such a prevention of disease would be an ironic but welcome gain from a pandemic.https://philosophy.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_11555_5b7ad9df15924d293ecb9831b9a38ffb.pdfproblem of sustaining unexpected gainstransport fuelled by renew ably-generated electricityenergy policyreduced spread of tropical diseasesbird-song
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robin Attfield
spellingShingle Robin Attfield
The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
Philosophical Investigations
problem of sustaining unexpected gains
transport fuelled by renew ably-generated electricity
energy policy
reduced spread of tropical diseases
bird-song
author_facet Robin Attfield
author_sort Robin Attfield
title The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
title_short The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
title_full The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
title_fullStr The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
title_full_unstemmed The Virus and the Environment: The Problem of Sustaining Unexpected Gains
title_sort virus and the environment: the problem of sustaining unexpected gains
publisher University of Tabriz
series Philosophical Investigations
issn 2251-7960
2423-4419
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The coronavirus pandemic has had some unexpected benign effects (including a large drop in air pollution and levels of nitrogen oxides in UK and elsewhere, and a smaller drop in global carbon emissions), which raises the problem of how to sustain and build on these unexpected gains. These gains could easily be lost when economies and road transport return to something like their previous condition. But if governments and industries are inspired to reduce automobile emissions to match the levels of the spring of 2020, gains such as these could become recurrent, and many more lives could be saved. Further, if (with greater effort) carbon emissions could remain reduced, then future generations could be saved from sea-level rise, extreme weather events, and even from the spread of tropical diseases. Such a prevention of disease would be an ironic but welcome gain from a pandemic.
topic problem of sustaining unexpected gains
transport fuelled by renew ably-generated electricity
energy policy
reduced spread of tropical diseases
bird-song
url https://philosophy.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_11555_5b7ad9df15924d293ecb9831b9a38ffb.pdf
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