Qatar Economic Outlook 2021 - 2023
36
Lessons From COVID-19 for
Moving Towards a Green and
Climate Economy
Despite the cost in lives, as well as social and
economic losses deriving from Covid-19
containment measures, the pandemic has
taught humanity
to embrace an alternative
lifestyle as far as consumption and
production processes are concerned, the
results of which have turned out to be eco-
friendly, including (1) illuminating how a
decline in agricultural and industrial
production and services, including road and
air transport, can lead to a marked reduction
in air pollution, (2) underscoring how the
change
of lifestyles, such as rationed
household consumption, lower consumer
spending which increased household
savings worldwide (with the exception of the
US, where the inability to travel and eat out
turned discretionary spending to the
purchase of durable goods)
18
, (3) increased
the use of
information technology to
communicate, complete educational tasks,
and work from home, which are able to reflect
positively on the environment by reducing
commuting to work places, (4) demonstrating
how economic systems and health
infrastructures were insufficiently prepared to
cope with a global pandemic, bolstering the
concept that humanity must hasten to
prepare for the inevitable next one – because
even if the anthropogenic causes of global
heating are reduced, completely avoiding the
multiple negative effects of the climate crisis
will be difficult to achieve since unsustainable
economic
structures, particularly the
ambitions of achieving unlimited economic
growth, leads governments to search for
adaptation solutions instead of reaching for
zero emissions, and (5)
highlighting how
18
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-
development/2020/12/14/the-decline-and-recovery-of-consumer-
spending-in-the-us
environmental and health disasters do not
have political or geographical borders, which
therefore mandates international cooperation
and a unified behavior of countries and
individuals in dealing with environmental
issues as guided by scientific studies.
This silver lining of the Covid-19 containment
measures provided the world with robust
evidence through the means of a natural
experiment
of what advocates for
environmental protection have been calling
for over the past three or more decades,
within the framework of United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), its conferences and agreements,
the most recent of which was the Glasgow
Climate Conference (COP26)
held in
November 2021, see Box (1-7).
The scientific consensus
19
that human
practices in consumption and production are
behind climate change the world is endorsed
by nearly all governments; the climate crisis
is now being viewed as urgent and current,
rather than hypothesized and distant, as the
world is witnessing today that anthropogenic
climate change has led to an increase in
global warming, triggering in many countries
extreme heat and drought,
immense
wildfires, and increasing catastrophic floods,
all of which both kill people and endanger
food production.
19
Le Quéré, C., Jackson, R.B., Jones, M.W. et al. Temporary reduction in
daily global CO2 emissions during the COVID-19 forced confinement.
Nat. Clim. Chang. 10, 647
–
653 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-
020-0797-x