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Industrial Heritage in the Covid19 Aftermath. Glocal Facebook Video Conference. May 16, 2020. Miguel Ángel Álvarez Areces He studied Economics at the University of Santiago de Compostela, taking his degree and diploma in 1977. He developed his professional career in a private company in a factory of construction materials, then he worked as an economist in the local administration and since 1982 in the mining company HUNOSA, being the head of the Studies and Communication Service and later Director of Heritage in this public company, the most important in coal mining in Spain, being currently retired. He has been President of INCUNA (Industry, Culture and Nature) since 1999 and is a founding partner and honorary member of the International Committee for the Conservation of Industrial Heritage TICCIH in Spain, and its president from 2004 to 2019, being its National Representative. He has been Director of the magazine Ábaco de cultura y ciencias sociales since 1986 and Director of the editorial collections of CICEES "Los ojos de la memoria", "La herencia recuperada", "Máquina de las palabras" and "Caravasar" on cultural heritage, tourism, local development, urban management and marketing of cities and territories. Member of the Follow-up Commission of the Spanish National Industrial Heritage Plan (IPCE_MECD), and member of the international networks: CONPADRE Conference on Landscapes, Heritage and Regional Development); Network of Marketing of Cities and Urban Development, and participates in the European programmes CherieTech and HYSCAPES on heritage and electric landscapes in Europe. Member of the Editorial Board of the magazines: "Ábaco, revista ce cultura y ciencias sociales", "Patrimoine de l'industrie / Industrial Patrimony" (Koinetwork - Paris), "Labor&Engenho" of the University of Campinas (Brazil), Eix (National Museum of Science and Technology of Catalonia), Patrimonio Industriale (AIPAI, Italy), among others. He has been the director of projects such as: "Los caminos de la Plata en España y América" (2006/2007), which received the first international prize for civil associations "Somos Patrimonio 2008" by the Andrés Bello Convention; director of the study on "The state of protection of Industrial Heritage in Spain (IPCE, 2012); coordinator of the programme "Spanish mining landscapes" (MECD 2013), director of "Xacogeo", industrial, cultural and natural heritage along the Camino de Santiago (MECD 2010) and the project "Espa'chino" on cultural tourism between China and Spain (MECD 2011). He has been a member of the editorial team of "100 elements of Industrial Heritage in Spain" (TICCIH 2010) and technical director of the applications (APP) on heritage, tourist guides and landscape of industrial heritage in Spain. He is the curator of the exhibition Tracks (Memory) Icons of Industrial Memory, UNESCO World Heritage Site that is being exhibited in 2020 in various places in Spain. Author of more than a hundred publications, author or co-author of books and articles, especially on landscapes and energy economics, industrial heritage, local and regional development, environmental economics, tourism and cultural economics. He is the president of the Organizing Committee of the International Conference on Industrial Heritage that this year 2020 celebrates its 22nd edition. He is currently working on the project for the creation and development of the CIRPI- IncunaLab, International Reference Centre for Industrial Heritage, with a documentation centre and laboratory for cultural and creative industries in the business centre of the former CRISTASA glass factory in Gijón. These are historic times that are teaching us valuable lessons as to how we can meet the future challenges. The question we are asking ourselves and which may not yet have a clear answer is: will the health crisis and the Covid19 which has stopped the world, make us adopt a new model for life? On that respect, i remember what Albert Camus wrote in his book "The Plague" "In general terms, observe moderation, which is the first enemy of the plague and the natural rule of mankind" This crisis may offer us space to pause and reflect and help our governments and our society to understand that heritage is industrial, cultural and natural and important, and that resources should not be reduced although right now the priorities are in other areas, such as health and economy. First, one of the lessons learnt pot Covid19 is that the state must be a guarantor and redistributor of essential public services for all people. The public's interests must be put first and we should not follow blindly the prescriptions of the neoliberal market that only accentuates inequality as we have seen over the various crises in recent years. for this reason, a common effort is needed to overcome the egoism of politics designed on "every man for himself". [For the entire abstract, in english or spanish, check the FB page and the final ebook of the event]