Abstract

The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has led to a worldwide lockdown, and this restriction on human movements and activities has significantly affected society and the environment. Some effects might be quantitative, but some might be qualitative, and some effects could prolong immediately and/or persistently. This study examined the consequences of global lockdown for human movement and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) emissions using an air pollution index and dataset and satellite image analyses. We also evaluated the immediate (during lockdown) and persistent (after lockdown) effects of lockdown on achieving the SDGs. Our analysis revealed a drastic reduction in human movement and NO2 emissions and showed that many SDGs were influenced both immediately and persistently due to the global lockdown. We observed the immediate negative impacts on four goals and positive impacts on five goals, especially those concerning economic issues and ecosystem conservation, respectively. The persistent effects of lockdown were likely to be predominantly reversed from their immediate impacts due to economic recovery. The global lockdown has influenced the global community’s ability to meet the SDGs, and our analysis provides powerful insights into the status of the internationally agreed-upon SDGs both during and after the COVID-19-induced global lockdown.

Highlights

  • Society changed drastically in 2020 due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic

  • The COVID-19 Government Response Stringency Index (GRSI) scores were calculated daily based on citizen restriction policies

  • We found mixed negative and positive scores for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) achievements when considering the immediate effects of the global lockdown (Fig. 5b)

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Summary

Introduction

Society changed drastically in 2020 due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. COVID-19 was first observed in Wuhan, China, and had spread to every continent by April 2020 [1, 2]. To reduce the spread of COVID-19, China imposed a lockdown in Wuhan City on 23 January 2020 [1]. WHO reported 202,138,110 infected cases, with 4,285,299 confirmed deaths in 215 countries and territories around the world resulting from COVID-19 up to 8 August 2021 (URL: https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/weekly-operational-update-on-covid-​19---9-august-​2021). The disease has caused a massive global health challenge and created ripples in the medical fraternity [1, 2].

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