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Bioenergy, bike paths and closed-plan offices: How businesses and governments are preparing for a post-pandemic world

As the COVID-19 crisis changes the fundamentals of our society, businesses and governments are already grappling with the issues of a post-pandemic world.
post-pandemic world discrimination

Even as countries begin the long, slow climb out of lockdown, thereโ€™s growing recognition that whatever our societies and economies look like once this is all over, it wonโ€™t be much like 2019.

When we return to work, what will work look like? What kind of cities and economies will we live in? And while the affluent west plans an escape, the worldโ€™s war-torn regions await an even greater crisis on the horizon.

Goodbye open-plan office

The pandemic will end many of the things we love โ€” some of our favourite restaurants, bars and cafes might never reopen, and cheap holidays could be a long way off.

But it might also contribute to the demise of one of the most universally reviled necessities of contemporary life: the open-plan office. A study of an outbreakย at a South Korean call centre, where nearly half the employees on a single floor got infected, has shown just how quickly the virus can spread through an office space.

That means as people start heading back to work, we may have to rethink how we design office spaces. Thereโ€™s already a broad recognition that working from home will be far more normalised, and travelling vast distances for a single meeting is out. It could also see the panoptic open-plan office, another of Silicon Valleyโ€™s gifts to the world, replaced by 90s-eraย high-walled cubicles.

Tech companies are starting toย stock upย on office dividers โ€” another sign that nature is healing?

A greener future?

COVID-19 has, to some extent, put the increasingly urgent issue of climate change on the backburner.

But with economic activity ground to a halt, personal car usageย plummeting, and travel suspended, global carbon emissions from the fossil fuel industry couldย fall 5%ย this year. In megacities across the world, skies are finally free of pollution.

How long any of this lasts depends on whether we embrace a fundamentally different, more sustainable post-pandemic economy. At a city level, there have been some progressive noises. Amsterdam is embracing the โ€œdoughnut economyโ€ โ€” the latest, faddish idea that means functioning in the optimal middle ground between meeting minimum living standards and avoiding ecological catastrophe.

Milan wants toย remove carsย from 35 kilometres of once-congested urban streets, while Paris and Oakland are expanding bike paths. In Australia, experts are now calling on state and federal governments to shift the balance of urban infrastructure away from cars and back toward pedestrians and cyclists.

There are also some positive signs for the renewable energy sector, although whether weโ€™ll see a dramatic post-COVID-19 surge is still unclear.

As oil prices tank, renewables now make up a record fifth ofย American electricity.ย Angus Taylor hasย flaggedย bioenergy as the next step in Australiaโ€™s emissions reduction strategy. But that alone isnโ€™t enough, and climate scientists areย urging the governmentย not to waste a good crisis, and use the post-pandemic recovery as an opportunity to push for growth in the renewables sector.

What happens to sport?

While the NRL remains stubbornly determined to start up this month, and have spectators back in its usually half-empty stadiums in time for a spring finals series, other sporting bodies are far more cautious.

While Germanyโ€™s Bundesliga could be the first major football league to restart, and pending a commitment from the government, Ligue 1 in France had itsย season cancelled, after Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced live sport could not start until September. FIFAโ€™s chief doctor recently said we might as well forget aboutย professional football until next season.

Either way, without crowds, will any live sport really be the same? The Tokyo Olympics, postponed until next year, are still in doubt. Yesterday, the head of the Japan Medical Associationย suggestedย that without a vaccine, holding the games next year might not be viable. A further delay would effectively be the death knell for Tokyoโ€™s Olympics.

Virus brings more misery

Recent pleas by the United Nations for ceasefires in conflict zones, which wereย blockedย by the US and Russia, may have fallen on deaf ears.

Although the Saudi Coalition announcing a unilateral two-week ceasefire in Yemen, the pandemic is generally, making things worse for some of the worldโ€™s most vulnerable areas. In Yemen, where just one test has been conducted, the UNย fearsย COVID-19 is spreading undetected, and is worried a shortfall in funding could cause another humanitarian crisis.

Refugee groups say itโ€™s just aย matter of timeย before the virus hits Idlib province in Syria, an area hit hard by the countryโ€™s civil war. The United Nations is desperate for aย ceasefire. In Libya, which has been in a near-perpetual state of chaos since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi, there areย fearsย a greater outbreak of the virus could destroy and already decimated health system.

There are also concerns about the pandemicโ€™s impact on Europeโ€™s forgotten war in Eastern Ukraine, and that moves toward peace couldย unravel.

This article was first published by Crikey.

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