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Sustainable development goal 13 and switching priorities: addressing climate change in the context of pandemic recovery efforts

Leal Filho, Walter [autor] | Minhas, Aprajita [autora] | Schmook, Birgit Inge [autora] | Márdero Jiménez, Silvia Sofía [autora] | Sharifi, Ayyoob [autor] | Paz, Shlomit [autor/a] | Kovaleva, Marina [autora] | Albertini, Maria Cristina [autora] | Skouloudis, Antonis [autor].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 en línea Artículo en línea Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Desarrollo sostenible | Infecciones por coronavirus | Pandemias | Pobreza | Cambio climáticoTema(s) en inglés: Sustainable development | Coronavirus infections | Pandemics | Poverty | Climate changeNota de acceso: Acceso en línea sin restricciones En: Environmental Sciences Europe. Volumen 35, número 1, artículo número 6 (2023), páginas 1-14. --ISSN: 2190-4715Número de sistema: 63417Resumen:
Inglés

The COVID-19 pandemic has had many deep social and economic impacts that go beyond health issues. One consequence is that the pandemic has made it even harder to mobilize the financial resources needed to pursue SDG 13 (Climate Action) as a whole and to fund climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts in particular. This is especially acute in respect of the efforts to achieve the targets set by the Paris Agreement and by the recent decisions in Glasgow. This paper looks at how the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated poverty and undermined climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts, as a result of the switches in priorities and funding. Using a review of the recent literature, an analysis of international trends, and a survey among climate scientists, it identifies some of the impacts of the pandemic on climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts and discusses their implications. The findings indicate a decrease in funding to climate change research since the pandemic crisis. The bibliometric analysis reveals that a greater emphasis has been placed on the relationship between COVID-19 and poverty when compared to the interrelations between COVID-19 and climate change. Addressing climate change is as urgent now as it was before the pandemic crisis started, and efforts need to be made to upkeep the levels of funding needed to support research in this field.

Recurso en línea: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12302-022-00701-4
Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Birgit Inge Schmook
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Acceso en línea sin restricciones

The COVID-19 pandemic has had many deep social and economic impacts that go beyond health issues. One consequence is that the pandemic has made it even harder to mobilize the financial resources needed to pursue SDG 13 (Climate Action) as a whole and to fund climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts in particular. This is especially acute in respect of the efforts to achieve the targets set by the Paris Agreement and by the recent decisions in Glasgow. This paper looks at how the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated poverty and undermined climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts, as a result of the switches in priorities and funding. Using a review of the recent literature, an analysis of international trends, and a survey among climate scientists, it identifies some of the impacts of the pandemic on climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts and discusses their implications. The findings indicate a decrease in funding to climate change research since the pandemic crisis. The bibliometric analysis reveals that a greater emphasis has been placed on the relationship between COVID-19 and poverty when compared to the interrelations between COVID-19 and climate change. Addressing climate change is as urgent now as it was before the pandemic crisis started, and efforts need to be made to upkeep the levels of funding needed to support research in this field. eng

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