Glycolosis is an anerobic process, in vertebrate muscle cells, or simpler organisms. The process produces ATP, and also reduces NAD+ to NADPH (and others.) NAD+ can be regenerated from NADPH by the electron transport chain, that uses oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor, reducing it to water. That part is aerobic. The Krebs cycle produces CO2 as well as NADPH and friends, and I assume vertebrates need to breathe to get rid of CO2, but its not aerobic per se. NAD can be regenerated in muscle cells by forming lactic acid or in say, yeast by forming CO2 and ethanol, both from the terminal product of glycolosis, pyruvate. All this is to regenerate NAD+ so more fermentation can happen, not to make energy.
I always assumed vertebrate brains can't rely on glycolosyisn alone because the cells energy needs are high, but someone will correct me soon if there's a biochemical explanation for a missing metabolic pathway in brain cells.