Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 16 –
Environmentalists everywhere have been pleased by declines in air and water
pollution as a result of the pandemic-driven economic slowdown -- but less
because of these results which are likely to end when the slowdown does than
because they prove that governments could take effective actions to clean up
the environment, Pavel Vyshebaba says.
In many places, the Ukrainian
environmentalist says, there has been a sharp decline in pollution of air and
water and people are benefitting from that even if they are living under the
threat of infection (apostrophe.ua/article/society/2020-04-16/eyforiya-dlya-okrujayuschey-sredyi-kakie-ekologicheskie-posledstviya-prineset-korona-krizis/32261).
But it is too early to break out the
champagne, Vyshebaba says, because environmentalists know that unless there are
fundamental changes in government policies about economic activity, pollution
levels will go right back to where they were before the pandemic arose. Indeed,
the loosening of rules in countries like the US may make them even worse.
What environmentalists should
welcome and be focusing on, the Ukrainian activist argues, is that the speed
with which the pandemic-driven slowdown led to ecological improvements proves
that what they have been saying all along is true: concerted action to limit
pollution works and can have immediate and dramatic consequences.
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