Earth's Future (Jul 2021)
The COVID‐19 Pandemic Not Only Poses Challenges, but Also Opens Opportunities for Sustainable Transformation
- Prajal Pradhan,
- Daya Raj Subedi,
- Dilip Khatiwada,
- Kirti Kusum Joshi,
- Sagar Kafle,
- Raju Pandit Chhetri,
- Shobhakar Dhakal,
- Ambika Prasad Gautam,
- Padma Prasad Khatiwada,
- Jony Mainaly,
- Sharad Onta,
- Vishnu Prasad Pandey,
- Keshav Parajuly,
- Sijal Pokharel,
- Poshendra Satyal,
- Devendra Raj Singh,
- Rocky Talchabhadel,
- Rupesh Tha,
- Bhesh Raj Thapa,
- Kamal Adhikari,
- Shankar Adhikari,
- Ram Chandra Bastakoti,
- Pitambar Bhandari,
- Saraswoti Bharati,
- Yub Raj Bhusal,
- Man Bahadur BK,
- Ramji Bogati,
- Simrin Kafle,
- Manohara Khadka,
- Nawa Raj Khatiwada,
- Ajay Chandra Lal,
- Dinesh Neupane,
- Kaustuv Raj Neupane,
- Rajit Ojha,
- Narayan Prasad Regmi,
- Maheswar Rupakheti,
- Alka Sapkota,
- Rupak Sapkota,
- Mahashram Sharma,
- Gitta Shrestha,
- Indira Shrestha,
- Khadga Bahadur Shrestha,
- Sarmila Tandukar,
- Shyam Upadhyaya,
- Jürgen P. Kropp,
- Dinesh Raj Bhuju
Affiliations
- Prajal Pradhan
- Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) Member of the Leibniz Association Potsdam Germany
- Daya Raj Subedi
- Mid‐West University Surkhet Nepal
- Dilip Khatiwada
- Division of Energy Systems Department of Energy Technology KTH Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm Sweden
- Kirti Kusum Joshi
- Department of Architecture Institute of Engineering Tribhuvan University Lalitpur Nepal
- Sagar Kafle
- Department of Agricultural Engineering Institute of Engineering Tribhuvan University Dharan Nepal
- Raju Pandit Chhetri
- Prakriti Resources Center Kathmandu Nepal
- Shobhakar Dhakal
- Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Change Asian Institute of Technology Klong Luang Pathumthani Thailand
- Ambika Prasad Gautam
- Kathmandu Forestry College Kathmandu Nepal
- Padma Prasad Khatiwada
- Central Department of Population Studies Tribhuvan University Kathmandu Nepal
- Jony Mainaly
- Vidhigya Legal Services and Research Center Kathmandu Nepal
- Sharad Onta
- People's Health Movement Nepal Kathmandu Nepal
- Vishnu Prasad Pandey
- International Water Management Institute Kathmandu Nepal
- Keshav Parajuly
- Sustainable Cycles Programme (SCYCLE) Vice Rectorate in Europe United Nations University Bonn Germany
- Sijal Pokharel
- International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) Kathmandu Nepal
- Poshendra Satyal
- Science, Policy and Information Division BirdLife International Cambridge UK
- Devendra Raj Singh
- Department of Public Health Asian College for Advance Studies Purbanchal University Lalitpur Nepal
- Rocky Talchabhadel
- Texas A&M AgriLife Research Texas A&M University El Paso TX USA
- Rupesh Tha
- Resources Himalaya Foundation Lalitpur Nepal
- Bhesh Raj Thapa
- Universal Engineering and Science College Lalitpur Nepal
- Kamal Adhikari
- Resources Himalaya Foundation Lalitpur Nepal
- Shankar Adhikari
- REDD Implementation Centre Ministry of Forests and Environment Kathmandu Nepal
- Ram Chandra Bastakoti
- Technical Cooperation Facility to the Agriculture Development Strategy Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development Kathmandu Nepal
- Pitambar Bhandari
- Department of Conflict, Peace and Development Studies Tribhuvan University Kathmandu Nepal
- Saraswoti Bharati
- Faculty of Education Tribhuvan University Kathmandu Nepal
- Yub Raj Bhusal
- Mid‐West University Surkhet Nepal
- Man Bahadur BK
- Provincial Government Office of the Chief Minister and Council of Ministers Hetauda Bagmati Nepal
- Ramji Bogati
- Nepal Open University Lalitpur Nepal
- Simrin Kafle
- Nepal Development Society (NEDS) Bharatpur Nepal
- Manohara Khadka
- International Water Management Institute Kathmandu Nepal
- Nawa Raj Khatiwada
- Nepal Development Research Institute Lalitpur Nepal
- Ajay Chandra Lal
- Department of Architecture Institute of Engineering Tribhuvan University Lalitpur Nepal
- Dinesh Neupane
- Resources Himalaya Foundation Lalitpur Nepal
- Kaustuv Raj Neupane
- Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies Kathmandu Nepal
- Rajit Ojha
- Department of Water Supply and Sewerage Management Ministry of Water Supply Kathmandu Nepal
- Narayan Prasad Regmi
- Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies Kathmandu Nepal
- Maheswar Rupakheti
- Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS) Potsdam Germany
- Alka Sapkota
- Himalayan White House International College Kathmandu Nepal
- Rupak Sapkota
- Institute of Foreign Affairs Kathmandu Nepal
- Mahashram Sharma
- School of Education Kathmandu University Lalitpur Nepal
- Gitta Shrestha
- International Water Management Institute Kathmandu Nepal
- Indira Shrestha
- Shtrii Shakti Kathmandu Nepal
- Khadga Bahadur Shrestha
- Nepal Institute of Health Science Purbanchal University Kathmandu Nepal
- Sarmila Tandukar
- Policy Research Institute Kathmandu Nepal
- Shyam Upadhyaya
- Independent expert practitioner (former Chief Statistician of UNIDO, Vienna) Vienna Austria
- Jürgen P. Kropp
- Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) Member of the Leibniz Association Potsdam Germany
- Dinesh Raj Bhuju
- Mid‐West University Surkhet Nepal
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2021EF001996
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 9,
no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a
Abstract
Abstract The COVID‐19 pandemic has impacted social, economic, and environmental systems worldwide, slowing down and reversing the progress made in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). SDGs belong to the 2030 Agenda to transform our world by tackling humankind's challenges to ensure well‐being, economic prosperity, and environmental protection. We explore the potential impacts of the pandemic on SDGs for Nepal. We followed a knowledge co‐creation process with experts from various professional backgrounds, involving five steps: online survey, online workshop, assessment of expert's opinions, review and validation, and revision and synthesis. The pandemic has negatively impacted most SDGs in the short term. Particularly, the targets of SDG 1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 13 have and will continue to have weakly to moderately restricting impacts. However, a few targets of SDG 2, 3, 6, and 11 could also have weakly promoting impacts. The negative impacts have resulted from impeding factors linked to the pandemic. Many of the negative impacts may subside in the medium and long terms. The key five impeding factors are lockdowns, underemployment and unemployment, closure of institutions and facilities, diluted focus and funds for non‐COVID‐19‐related issues, and anticipated reduction in support from development partners. The pandemic has also opened a window of opportunity for sustainable transformation, which is short‐lived and narrow. These opportunities are lessons learned for planning and action, socio‐economic recovery plan, use of information and communication technologies and the digital economy, reverse migration and “brain gain,” and local governments' exercising authorities.
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