The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced global emissions, cleaner air, less noise), that the climate community has aspired to achieve over a number of decades. However, these benefits have been achieved at a massive cost to welfare and the economy. This commentary draws lessons from the COVID-19 crisis for climate change. It discusses whether there are more sustainable ways of achieving these benefits, as part of a more desirable, low carbon resilient future, in a more planned, inclusive and less disruptive way. In order to achieve this, we argue for a clearer social contract between citizens and the state. We discuss how COVID-19 has demonstrated that behaviours can change abruptly...
The paper explores the challenges posed by climate change and proposes an approach to mobilizing a s...
The COVID19 pandemic has served as a salutary reminder of the potential fragility of our relationshi...
Has COVID-19 changed the world forever? Is it the signal to treat Nature differently and mobilise ef...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has triggered the largest drop in greenhouse gas em...
In the beginning of 2020, it looked like serious climate action was finally going to take place aft...
The Covid-19 pandemic has confronted humanity with a complex and unexpected challenge. One part of t...
Human behaviour change is necessary to meet targets set by the Paris Agreement to mitigate climate c...
The UN 2030 Agenda’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the COVID-19 pandemic share two imp...
COVID-19 crisis has emphasized how poorly prepared humanity is to cope with global disasters. Howeve...
Quantitative systems modelling in support of climate policy has tended to focus more on the supply s...
In this paper, Nicholas Stern argues that the COVID-19 and climate crises, and the weaknesses that p...
Climate change is arguably the defining issue of our time, with global impacts. Yet to date, scholar...
The paper explores the challenges posed by climate change and proposes an approach to mobilizing a s...
The COVID19 pandemic has served as a salutary reminder of the potential fragility of our relationshi...
Has COVID-19 changed the world forever? Is it the signal to treat Nature differently and mobilise ef...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The COVID-19 imposed lockdown has led to a number of temporary environmental side effects (reduced g...
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has triggered the largest drop in greenhouse gas em...
In the beginning of 2020, it looked like serious climate action was finally going to take place aft...
The Covid-19 pandemic has confronted humanity with a complex and unexpected challenge. One part of t...
Human behaviour change is necessary to meet targets set by the Paris Agreement to mitigate climate c...
The UN 2030 Agenda’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the COVID-19 pandemic share two imp...
COVID-19 crisis has emphasized how poorly prepared humanity is to cope with global disasters. Howeve...
Quantitative systems modelling in support of climate policy has tended to focus more on the supply s...
In this paper, Nicholas Stern argues that the COVID-19 and climate crises, and the weaknesses that p...
Climate change is arguably the defining issue of our time, with global impacts. Yet to date, scholar...
The paper explores the challenges posed by climate change and proposes an approach to mobilizing a s...
The COVID19 pandemic has served as a salutary reminder of the potential fragility of our relationshi...
Has COVID-19 changed the world forever? Is it the signal to treat Nature differently and mobilise ef...