What have been the positives from the Coronavirus?
The weekend is upon us and it is pouring with rain and freezing cold outside. So, with some time on my hands (the positives of not being able to go outside) and sitting in front of our lovely warm fire with some magazines, my computer and settled in for some “me time.” After some time reading about all sorts of things my mind began to think and wonder about my world and what has been happening in it and the world these past several months!
I came across an article written by Professor Debbie Haski-Leventhal from Macquarie University which is interesting to read and provides an interesting perspective on the COVID-19 impacts.
Coronavirus (COVID-19) has had undeniable and horrific consequences on people’s lives and the economy. With sickness, death and unemployment rates soaring almost everywhere on our planet, it is easy to despair.
However, notwithstanding the gruesomeness of this situation, when reflecting back there has come some positives! Some outcomes could have a long-term positive impact on the planet and humanity.
The first positive aspect of COVID-19 is the effect on the environment. Carbon emissions are down globally and with manufacturing and air travel grinding to a halt, the planet has had a chance to rejuvenate. China recorded an 85 per cent increase in days with good air quality in 337 cities between January and March. With tourists gone from Italy, the long-polluted canals of Venice now appear clear as fish and other wildlife start returning. Elsewhere, wildlife is also reappearing in other major cities and the biodiversity is slowly starting to return in various parts of the world.
With Self-isolation/restrictions forced upon us it meant our life as we knew it was challenged! Humans are known to be social animals who desire relationships, contact and interaction with other humans.
However, people all around the world are finding new ways to address the need for interconnectedness. In Italy, one of the worst-hit countries, people are joining their instruments and voices to create music from their balconies. People are leading street dance parties while maintaining social distancing.
People are using social media platforms to connect, such as the Facebook group The Kindness Pandemic, with hundreds of daily posts. The bin challenges have also brought many a laugh from all over the world with all the different ways to take your bins out! There is a huge wave of formal and informal volunteering where people use their skills and abilities to help.
COVID-19 is a major market disruptor that has led to unprecedented levels of innovation. Due to the lockdown, so many businesses have had to reinvent themselves with a new 'business as unusual' philosophy.
This includes cafes turning into takeaway venues (some of which also now sell milk or face masks) and gin distilleries now making hand sanitisers.
Many businesses have had to undergo rapid digitalisation and offer their services online. Some could use this wave of innovation to reimagine their business model and change or grow their market.
COVID-19 is driving a new wave of corporate social responsibility. The global pandemic has become a litmus test for how seriously companies are taking their corporate social responsibility and their work with key stakeholders: the community, employees, consumers and the environment.
Companies are donating money, food and medical equipment to support people affected by the coronavirus. Others are giving to healthcare workers, including free coffee at McDonald’s Australia and millions of masks from Johnson & Johnson.
Many are supporting their customers, introducing an exclusive shopping hour for seniors and people with disabilities to Optus giving free mobile data so its subscribers can continue to connect.
There has been a positive outcome and a massive transformation in education. True, most of it was not by choice. With schools closing down all around the world, many teachers are digitalising the classroom, offering online education, educational games and tasks and self-led learning.
We are globally involved in one of the largest-scale experiments in changing education at all levels. Home-schooling is becoming the new way of learning, exposing many parents to what their children know and do.
Finally, the gift that COVID-19 is giving us is a new sense of appreciation and gratefulness. It has offered us a new perspective on everything we have taken for granted for so long – our freedoms, leisure, connections, work, family and friends. We have never questioned how life as we know it could be suddenly taken away from us.
Hopefully, when this crisis is over, we will exhibit new levels of gratitude. We have also learned to value and thank all the Frontline people who are at the frontline of this crisis, risking their lives everyday by just showing up to their vital work. This sense of gratefulness can also help us develop our resilience and overcome the crisis in the long-term.
All of these positive aspects come at a great price of death, sickness and a depressed global economy. As heartbreaking and frightening as this crisis is, its positive outcomes can be gifts we should not overlook. If we ignore them, all of this becomes meaningless.
It will be up to us to change ourselves and our system to continue with the positive environmental impact, peace, connectedness, innovation, corporate responsibility, reimagined education and gratitude. This crisis will end. We will meet again. We can do so as better human beings.