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Home Letters

Time for an all-out response to Covid-19

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
January 9, 2021
in Letters
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Dear Editor

The spread of the coronavirus has left few, if any, communities untouched. Governments around the Globe have had to react quickly. Emergency distancing measures have been put in place, workers have been ordered to stay at home, and relief packages are beginning to flow. This is what government action looks like in a time of disruption. And this new found sense of rapid mobilisation and response provides a powerful lesson for the next crisis we know is coming: climate change.

READ ALSO

Court Action Urged Over Constitutional Breach, Opposition Leader Standoff

This generation of Guyanese must not let down our fore-fathers

In fact, climate change is already here. Last year was the second warmest year on record, and wildfires ravaged forests in the West. The world was surprised by the emergence of a new disease with global impacts, but climate change is not new. The risk is real and the risk is now.

However, with the public’s attention focused on coronavirus,  some  governments administration weakened environmental rules, allowing industry to self-regulate its air and water pollution. Fuel efficiency standards were also rolled back, leading to increased greenhouse gas emissions. We must keep the pressure on for strong environmental protections at  all levels of government, despite the coronavirus view of  oversight of polluting industries.

The most inspiring response to coronavirus has been the mutual aid from person to person. We understand, more than at any time in recent memory, that we share a common societal bond. A solution must be reached together. Once coronavirus is vanquished and it  will  end, our shared response to the pandemic must inform us how to move ahead and confront climate change.

Some Governments around the globe have an upfront example of the widespread mobilization required to make important change.

If we can use private industry to produce ventilators and protective equipment in a time of need, why can’t we use the same strategy to build renewable energy capacity and battery storage, in quick order, to transition our electricity sector away from fossil fuel generation? If we could take swift action to construct emergency hospitals across the  world during this pandemic, some countries can similarly make use of trained professionals to weatherize, insulate, and install heat pumps in homes and buildings to reduce our energy demand. The risk to our lives, our homes, and our jobs calls for an urgent, all-out response. Strong environmental leadership has never been more important

Regards
Rooplall Dudhnath

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