4.7 Article

Analysis of the scientific production of the effect of COVID-19 on the environment: A bibliometric study

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 193, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110416

Keywords

Environmental studies; Bibliometric analysis; SciMAT; COVID-19; Coronavirus; Pandemic; Journalism; Communication; Mass media

Funding

  1. Junta de Andalusia [REF: B-SEJ-220-UGR18]
  2. Fundacion Ramon Areces [RARECES01-2019]

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Since January 2020, the fight against COVID-19 has become the top priority for over 200 countries. Scientific research has revealed the connections between environmental studies and COVID-19, shedding light on the significant implications of environmental changes and impacts during the COVID-19 pandemic for future research.
The fight against COVID-19 since January 2020 has become the top priority of more than 200 countries. In order to offer solutions to eradicate this global pandemic, the scientific community has published hundreds of articles covering a wide range of areas of knowledge. With the aim of synthesizing these publications, academics are resorting to bibliometric analyses from the perspectives of the disciplines such as biology, medicine, socioeconomics and tourism. Yet no bibliometric analysis has explored the diffuse and little-known growth of COVID-19 scientific publications in the field of environmental studies. The current study is the first of this type to fill this research gap. It has resorted to SciMAT software to evaluate the main topics, authors and journals of publications on the subject of COVID-19 combined with environmental studies spanning the period between 1 December 2019 and 6 September 2020. The search yielded a collection of 440 articles published in scientific journals indexed on by Web of Science and Scopus databases. These publications can be broken down into six main themes: (i) a sharp reduction in air pollution and an improvement of the level of water pollution; (ii) the relationship of wind speed (positive), ultraviolet radiation (positive) and humidity (negative) with the rate of infections; (iii) the effect of the pandemic on the food supply chain and waste habits; (iv) wastewater monitoring offers a great potential as an early warning sign of COVID-19 transmission; (v) artificial intelligence and smart devices can be of great use in monitoring citizen mobilization; and (vi) the lessons gleaned from the pandemic that help define actions to mitigate climate change. The results of the current study therefore offer an agenda for future research and constitute a starting point for academics in the field of environmental studies to evaluate the effects of COVID-19.

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