The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic not only created a health crisis across the world but is expected to negatively impact the global economy and societies at a scale that maybe larger than the 2008 financial crisis. Simultaneously, it has inevitably exerted many negative consequences on the geoenvironment upon which human beings depend. The current article articulates the role of environmental geotechnics to elucidate and mitigate the effects of the current pandemic. It is the belief of all authors that the COVID-19 pandemic presents significant challenges, but also opportunities for the development of our field. Our discipline should make full use of our professional skills and expertise to look for development opportunities from this crisis, to highlight our discipline’s irreplaceable position in the global fight against pandemics, and to contribute to the health and prosperity of our communities, so as to better serve humankind. In order to reach this goal, while taking into account the specificity of the SARS-CoV-2 and the uncertainty of its environmental effects, it is believed that more emphasis should be placed on the following research directions: pathogen-soil interactions, isolation and remediation technologies for pathogen-contaminated sites, new materials for pathogen-contaminated soil, recycling and safe disposal of medical wastes, quantification of uncertainty in geoenvironmental and epidemiological problems, emerging technologies and adaptation strategies in civil, geotechnical, and geoenvironmental infrastructure, pandemic-induced environmental risk management, and model pathogen transport and fate in geoenvironment, among others. Moreover, COVID-19 has made it clear to the environmental geotechnics community the importance of urgent international cooperation and of multidisciplinary research actions that must extend to a broad range of scientific fields, including medical and public health disciplines, in order to meet the complexities posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Environmental Geotechnics: Challenges and Opportunities in the Post COVID-19 World / Tang, Chao-Sheng; K Paleologos, Evan; Vitone, Claudia; Du, Yan-Jun; Li, Jiang-Shan; Jiang, Ning-Jun; Deng, Yong-Feng; Chu, Jian; Shen, Zhengtao; Koda, Eugeniusz; Dominijanni, Andrea; Fei, Xunchang; Daria Vaverková, Magdalena; Osiński, Piotr; Chen, Xiaohui; Asadi, Afshin; RH Takeuchi, Maria; Win Bo, Myint; Abuel-Naga, Hossam; Leong, Eng-Choon; Farid, Arvin; Baser, Tugce; O' Kelly, Brendan C.; Jha, Bhagwanjee; Siva Naga Sai Goli, Venkata; Singh, Devendra N.. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL GEOTECHNICS. - ISSN 2051-803X. - ELETTRONICO. - (2021). [10.1680/jenge.20.00054]

Environmental Geotechnics: Challenges and Opportunities in the Post COVID-19 World

Claudia Vitone;
2021-01-01

Abstract

The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic not only created a health crisis across the world but is expected to negatively impact the global economy and societies at a scale that maybe larger than the 2008 financial crisis. Simultaneously, it has inevitably exerted many negative consequences on the geoenvironment upon which human beings depend. The current article articulates the role of environmental geotechnics to elucidate and mitigate the effects of the current pandemic. It is the belief of all authors that the COVID-19 pandemic presents significant challenges, but also opportunities for the development of our field. Our discipline should make full use of our professional skills and expertise to look for development opportunities from this crisis, to highlight our discipline’s irreplaceable position in the global fight against pandemics, and to contribute to the health and prosperity of our communities, so as to better serve humankind. In order to reach this goal, while taking into account the specificity of the SARS-CoV-2 and the uncertainty of its environmental effects, it is believed that more emphasis should be placed on the following research directions: pathogen-soil interactions, isolation and remediation technologies for pathogen-contaminated sites, new materials for pathogen-contaminated soil, recycling and safe disposal of medical wastes, quantification of uncertainty in geoenvironmental and epidemiological problems, emerging technologies and adaptation strategies in civil, geotechnical, and geoenvironmental infrastructure, pandemic-induced environmental risk management, and model pathogen transport and fate in geoenvironment, among others. Moreover, COVID-19 has made it clear to the environmental geotechnics community the importance of urgent international cooperation and of multidisciplinary research actions that must extend to a broad range of scientific fields, including medical and public health disciplines, in order to meet the complexities posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
2021
Environmental Geotechnics: Challenges and Opportunities in the Post COVID-19 World / Tang, Chao-Sheng; K Paleologos, Evan; Vitone, Claudia; Du, Yan-Jun; Li, Jiang-Shan; Jiang, Ning-Jun; Deng, Yong-Feng; Chu, Jian; Shen, Zhengtao; Koda, Eugeniusz; Dominijanni, Andrea; Fei, Xunchang; Daria Vaverková, Magdalena; Osiński, Piotr; Chen, Xiaohui; Asadi, Afshin; RH Takeuchi, Maria; Win Bo, Myint; Abuel-Naga, Hossam; Leong, Eng-Choon; Farid, Arvin; Baser, Tugce; O' Kelly, Brendan C.; Jha, Bhagwanjee; Siva Naga Sai Goli, Venkata; Singh, Devendra N.. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL GEOTECHNICS. - ISSN 2051-803X. - ELETTRONICO. - (2021). [10.1680/jenge.20.00054]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11589/198295
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