Environmental Management: Principles and practice
Illicit dumping and export of waste and pollution
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
Illicit dumping and export of waste and pollution
Illegal waste disposal is a problem. Within most countries fly-tipping poses health threats, and damages the landscape and wildlife. It is one of the most widespread means of sidestepping the polluter-pays principle. Fly-tipping may be by householders, traders or manufacturers, or by a dishonest contractor whom a client has paid for proper disposal. The solution is surveillance and checking waste for clues to its origin, then enforcement of severe penalties. Transporting waste or a pollutant does not solve the problem of disposal, it merely shifts it. As pollution controls are tightened in developed countries there is a CHAPTER ELEVEN 224 temptation for the export of hazardous substances to where regulations, labour costs and public resistance are more favourable. There are two ways of doing this: (1) a factory can be relocated in a developing country, or a subsidiary company can be established; (2) waste or pollutants can be shipped for ‘disposal’. If hazardous processes are transferred to a less developed country, employees and local people may not appreciate the risks, or may be forced by circumstances to accept them in return for employment. Companies may make inadequate declarations about the materials they are using for fear of regulations or loss of trade secrets (Ives, 1985:76). There is a need for better labelling of materials, inspection of sites and carriers, so that all involved know what is present, whether there is risk, and what safety measures are needed. Efforts have been made to improve controls on the export of hazardous waste. The EEC introduced regulations in 1988 which, like similar legislation in the USA, aimed at improving access to information so that monitoring cargoes would be easier for governments and NGOs. The Basle Convention, which came into force in 1993 (amended 1995), is intended to regulate international trade in hazardous waste and especially to ensure that hazard is not exported to developing countries. Unfortunately, although it was signed by 105 countries, it has gaps, and a number of European and other developed countries did not ratify the convention. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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