Environmental Management: Principles and practice
Strategic environmental management
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Strategic environmental management
The formalized, systematic and comprehensive process of evaluating the environmental effects of a policy, programme, or plan and alternatives (leading to publication of a report) is known as strategic environmental assessment. This has been applied to things like aid programmes, structural adjustment, changes in public transport policy, etc. (Partidário, 1996). Overlapping a little with strategic environmental assessment is strategic environmental management (SEM), which can be defined as the preparation and implementation of policies that seek sustainable development of the environment (Nijkamp and Soeteman, 1988). SEM should ensure a long-term view and adequate monitoring of local, regional and global issues. The Netherlands has gone further than most countries towards adopting SEM as part of national policy (Ministerie VROM, 1989), and Europe is committed to adopting it (Figure 13.1). FIGURE 13.1 Linkages of levels in sustainable development tasks (based on the approach adopted by the National Environmental Policy Plan of The Netherlands Source: Carley and Christie (1992:199, Fig. 9.2) CHAPTER THIRTEEN 258 It has been argued that there are situations where SEM may not be the best option, especially for some companies, in spite of pressure for its adoption (Vastag et al., 1996). Stance and environmental management Political and ethical stances play an important part in determining environmental management goals and the strategies used to achieve them. An environmental manager can follow a textbook scientific approach or, more likely, socioeconomic and politically aware approaches (Boehmer-Christiansen, 1994), and is influenced by his or her own outlook. Those who profess concern for the environment have a wide spectrum of viewpoints and usually frequently revise their ideas, so stance is usually rather elastic (Parkin, 1989). (O’Riordan and Turner, 1983:1–62 give an overview of environmentalist ideologies.) There are ‘light-greens’, prepared to make use of science and technology to improve human well-being and environmental quality, and who are aware of limitations in doing this; there are ‘cornucopians’, who probably have excessive trust in the capacity of science and technology to cure all environment and development problems; there are ‘deep-greens’, who mistrust science and technology and seek social changes and altered attitudes as a strategy; there are deep-greens who adopt a romantic approach, and some who profess a ‘holistic’ approach; and some who favour spiritual development or New Age values (Naess, 1989). Some environmentalists are ecocentric and give nature greater priority than human needs, while others are anthropocentric and place human needs first. Many greens adopt a decentralist, slightly anarchistic stance; others support established political parties (Pepper, 1984; Dalton, 1994; Dobson, 1995). The question is, with which group(s) does environmental management have sympathy? Many deep-greens believe that ecological awareness is spiritual and that new ethics, vital for satisfactory environmental management, must be grounded in spirituality (Sessions, 1994:21). Those who profess deep ecology also seek a paradigm shift, to a philosophy which aims at a sustainable society based on material simplicity and spiritual richness (Dobson, 1995). Supporters of social ecology advocate a decentralized, co-operative, anarcho- socialist lifestyle (claiming that if people are in harmony with one another they are more likely to be in harmony with nature—a far from established assumption) (Bookchin, 1972; 1982; 1986). Eco-feminism (see chapter 12) has been critical of deep-green and social ecology viewpoints, arguing that gender neutrality is not enough, and anti-androcentric approaches are needed to end paternalistic behaviour which leads to exploitation of women and the environment (Zimmerman, 1987; Cheney, 1987; Merchant, 1992). Extreme eco-radicals or ‘eco-warriors’, such as the Earth First! groups, put environmental welfare before human welfare and may resort to eco-terrorism (‘monkey-wrenching’), even violence in pursuit of their goals. Some animal rights groups take a similar line. Ecosocialism involves more than redefinition of human needs and redistribution ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT APPROACHES 259 of resources: it also seeks new forms of production which reject private ownership in favour of social justice and new forms of social order (Pepper, 1993). Environmental issues have been underplayed by Marxism and socialist theorists; the German die Grünen (‘greens’) boasted in the 1970s: ‘we are neither left nor right, we are ahead!’ and the lead seems not to have been challenged much. Socialist and communist utopian development efforts, say in the former USSR, have generated as severe environmental problems as western capitalism—both use industrialized manufacture and agriculture and have exploited resources with little concern for nature (Pryde, 1991). There are significant differences between socialism and green orientations (Bahro, 1982; 1984); to address the environmental gap in socialism, ‘green socialism’ has appeared (Ryle, 1988). An environmental manager working for a company or a government will probably have to liaise with a number of environmentalist groups, some co-operative, others difficult to work with or downright hostile. Without some form of co-ordination and, if need be, restraint a plethora of different environmental groups is unlikely to achieve much, but, guided by good environmental management, they may become powerful and useful allies. However, initially at least, there is a need for caution in dealings, to avoid misinformation, the risk of one group trying to gain advantages over another, over-powerful alliances, etc. Corporate environmental managers are generally aware of these risks and have developed guidelines. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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