University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Sci Adv. 2024 Mar;10(9):eadk4424. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adk4424. Epub 2024 Mar 1.
This paper explores how the COVID-19 pandemic affected science and tourism activities and their governance in the Antarctic and Southern Ocean. The pandemic reduced the ability of Antarctic Treaty Parties to make decisions on policy issues and placed a considerable burden on researchers. Tourism was effectively suspended during the 2020-2021 Antarctic season and heavily reduced in 2021-2022 but rebounded to record levels in 2022-2023. The pandemic stimulated reflection on practices to facilitate dialog, especially through online events. Opportunities arose to integrate innovations developed during the pandemic more permanently into Antarctic practices, in relation to open science, reducing operational greenhouse gas footprints and barriers of access to Antarctic research and facilitating data sharing. However, as well as the long-term impacts arising directly from the pandemic, an assemblage of major geopolitical drivers are also in play and, combined, these signal a considerable weakening of Antarctic exceptionalism in the early Anthropocene.
本文探讨了 COVID-19 大流行如何影响南极和南大洋的科学和旅游活动及其治理。大流行削弱了南极条约缔约方就政策问题做出决策的能力,并给研究人员带来了相当大的负担。在 2020-2021 年南极季,旅游业实际上被暂停,2021-2022 年大幅减少,但在 2022-2023 年反弹至创纪录水平。大流行促使人们反思促进对话的做法,特别是通过在线活动。出现了一些机会,可以将大流行期间开发的创新更永久地融入南极实践,涉及开放科学、减少运营温室气体足迹以及减少进入南极研究的障碍和促进数据共享。然而,除了大流行直接产生的长期影响外,一系列主要的地缘政治驱动因素也在发挥作用,这些因素结合在一起,表明在人类世早期,南极的特殊性正在大幅减弱。