DAWN Aug-Sept Edition

Page 26

Business - Commentary

Let’s Keep Meetings Virtual After Covid By Katherine H. Freeman and Raymond Jeanloz

IN 2020, THE ANNUAL COMMITTEE meeting of the journal we edit was a bit of a mess. It took place in March, just days before the World Health Organization declared Covid-19 a pandemic, so some attendees canceled their travel even as others were arriving at the meeting site. At the last minute, we pivoted to a hybrid meeting, with half the attendees in-person and the other half virtual. While the meeting was successful in terms of editorial decisions, the mixed format hampered our normally free-flowing discussions. The 2021 meeting of the journal, the Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, was entirely virtual. And it went much more smoothly. By then, we all had a year’s experience working in an online environment. Everyone was remote, which made the means of communication equitable, and we made sure each member had a chance to participate. We included breaks to reduce video fatigue, and breakout rooms for parallel smallgroup discussions that helped increase efficiency. We developed a more scripted schedule that we followed closely to ensure that everyone knew what to expect. In many professions, business travel is part of the job. This is particularly true in science, where international collaborations are the norm. But as we look ahead to a post-Covid world, we’re not sure that we want to go back to spending so much of our professional lives in planes, hotels, restaurants and rental cars. There are obvious benefits to inperson meet-ups, but they don’t always outweigh the costs: time, money and the effects of travel on the climate. More professions — especially within science — should explicitly consider those costs, and the benefits of virtual meetings. We’re not the only ones who don’t want a return to “normal”: More than 400 scientists have signed a

26

July-August 2021

letter urging US scientific organizations to explore more remote meetings in the future. A recent poll of more than 900 readers of the journal Nature found that nearly three-quarters want scientific meetings to be all virtual, or at least to have a remote option, even after Covid is over. There are obvious benefits to in-person meetups, but they don’t always outweigh the costs: time, money and the effects of travel on the climate. The benefits are obvious. A 2019 analysis from Runzheimer — part of the tech company Motus, which sells products for mobile workers — found that every business trip costs $1,300 per traveler. To US companies, that translated to roughly $112 billion in expenses in 2019 alone. Those costs render in-person meetings off-limits to many companies and individuals, effectively widening existing gaps. Even if people can afford to buy a plane ticket, they may have other limitations that make the trip impossible, such as illness or challenges with securing childcare. Some online accessibility features, such as real-time captioning, are not always available at in-person meetings. Virtual meetings can eliminate some of those barriers, and they may be more accessible: When the European Geosciences Union made its 2020 meeting virtual, attendance rose from a typical 16,000 to 26,000. Travel also has an enormous impact on climate. In one estimate published in Nature, air travel to a single scientific meeting — the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union, attended by 28,000 people from around the world — generated the equivalent of 80,000 tons of carbon dioxide, the average amount emitted by the entire city of Edinburgh over the course of a week. We can’t just flip a switch to virtual meetings

DAWN

www.africabusinessassociation.org


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Portuguese Colonization of Cape Verde

12min
pages 104-107

What Western Appraisals of Kenneth Kaunda Left Out

8min
pages 100-103

Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo Caps Extraordinary Postseason as NBA Finals MVP

1min
page 99

From Thatched Huts to Wakanda, a Massive New Architectural Guide Explores Sub- Saharan Africa

6min
pages 96-98

African Superhero Sema Aims to Inspire Kids Worldwide

3min
page 95

Senegal is Preserving its Oral History in a Podcast

4min
pages 92-94

'Wrong Number? Let's Chat' Maasai Herders in East Africa use Misdials to Make Connections

7min
pages 88-90

Africa is Blasting its way into the Space Race

2min
page 86

NASA Seeks Proposals for Commercial Space Station Development

2min
page 87

Glowing Bacteria May One Day Protect People From Landmines

4min
pages 84-85

Reuters' Hot List of Climate Scientists is Geographically Skewed - Why This Matters

4min
pages 82-83

Sundar Pichai Surprises Winner of Doodle for Google Contest with a Video Call

3min
pages 80-81

The Triumph of the Electric Motor

2min
page 79

SpaceX President says Starlink Global Satellite Broadbrand Service to be Live by September

2min
page 78

Launch of the Mediacity Mauritius Hub in Africa

1min
page 77

Seven African Start-ups Shaking up the Global Tech Ecosystem

7min
pages 74-76

African Tech Startups Funding Report 2020 Full Startup List

4min
pages 72-73

President Samia Gives Cryptocurrency Markets a Boost, as Bitcoin Closes on $40,000

2min
page 70

How to Attract Private Finance to Africa’s Development

4min
pages 68-69

South Africa Opens up to Private Power to Ease Blackouts

1min
page 71

Quartz: All You Need to Know About Africa's Four (Six?) Unicorns

1min
page 67

How Africa Could Become a World Leader in Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)

8min
pages 64-66

African Stock Exchange/Bourse

2min
pages 62-63

Jamaica Plans to Petition Queen for 'Overdue' Reparations for Caribbean

1min
page 61

News Bits

2min
page 60

Digital Africa: Leveling Up through Governance and Trade

8min
pages 56-59

After Economic Sanctions Crippled Mali, the AU and EU are Trying a New Tack

4min
pages 54-55

Covid-19’s Third Wave Dashes Hope of Tourism Revival in East Africa

5min
pages 52-53

I.M.F. Presents Plan to Help Poor Countries During Pandemic

3min
pages 50-51

EU’s New Vaccine Passport Scheme

1min
page 49

Kenya gets $750 Million World Bank Loan to Help Recovery from COVID-19 Eff ects

1min
page 48

Biden to Send 500 Million Doses of Pfi zer Vaccine to 100 Countries Over a Year

7min
pages 45-47

South Africa's President Ramaphosa Urges G7 Nations to Plug COVID-19 Funding Gap

1min
page 44

Ghana Fights Deforestation by Planting 5 Million Trees in 1 Day

1min
pages 40-41

Philanthropist Mo Ibrahim Tells Countries to 'Walk the Talk' in Supplying Africa COVID Vaccines

3min
pages 42-43

Big Irrigation Projects in Africa Have Failed to Deliver. What’s Needed Next

4min
pages 38-39

It’s Time for International Development in Africa to be Decolonized

4min
pages 33-35

Regenerative Ocean Farming: The (Least Deadliest Catch

3min
pages 36-37

Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellows Program deadline October 1, 2021

1min
page 29

Meet the Sisters Changing the Narrative Around Chocolate in Ghana

19min
pages 15-23

Let’s Keep Meetings Virtual After Covid

4min
pages 26-27

Startup 2021: Pros and Cons of Bootstrapping

3min
pages 24-25

Early Warning to Businesses - Act Now on Ransomware Defenses

6min
pages 8-10

Botswana Diamond Could be World's Third Largest

1min
page 11

Nigeria’s Comic Republic Signs Production Deal “To Bring African Superheroes to the World” (Exclusive)

4min
pages 12-14

These 5 Branding Factors Will Take Your Business to the Next Level

2min
page 28

Publisher's Message

4min
pages 4-7
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.