Environmental Management: Principles and practice
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
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- Environmental management and business: the current situation
- ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AND LAW
Life-cycle analysis
Many development activities are processes which have different stages—for example, manufacturing a car or running a power station involve raw materials and energy provision, plant construction, manufacturing, distribution, use and disposal or decommissioning. Equipment is usually subject to wear and tear, and so varies in performance and presents different risks as it ages and as management acquire experience (or become complacent). Industrial and power generation sites, for example, often accumulate contamination, and so the environmental threat is not constant. It is therefore undesirable to assess impacts or develop environmental management policies by simply taking a snapshot view. Life-cycle analysis (or assessment) has been developed to try to consider the whole of an activity, which may extend beyond the time horizon of a single owner. It is cradle-to-grave study of an activity or company (British Standards Institution, 1994a; Fava, 1994; Pidgeon and Brown, 1994; Franklin, 1995). Environmental management and business: the current situation One may summarize the present situation (see Beaumont, 1992:202) as: ♦ the majority of businesses are aware that environmental issues are important; ♦ some businesses are doing something—it may be from genuine concern, but often it is for public relations or profit motives; ♦ too often businesses adopt a ‘react and repair’ approach, rather than following precautionary principles; ♦ only a few businesses are acting at a strategic level; ♦ business is in need of strategies like industrial ecology, but will need to be encouraged or forced to adopt them. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AND LAW Law should provide a framework for regulating use of the environment (Harte, 1992; McEldowney, 1996; Bell, 1997) (Box 3.2). Law is crucial for environmental management in a number of ways, aiding: CHAPTER THREE 42 ♦ regulation of resource use; ♦ protection of the environment and biodiversity; ♦ mediation, conflict resolution and conciliation; ♦ formulation of stable, unambiguous undertakings and agreements. Environmental management may involve a number of resource situations, e.g. individually-owned (private) resources; national resources; shared resources; open- access resources; common property resources; global resources. Some of these are better covered by law than others (Berkes, 1989; The Ecologist, 1993). There are different legal systems—for example, based on Roman Law, on customary laws, Islamic Law, the Code Napoléon—to name but a few. Some countries have legal systems that combine more than one of these, say indigenous and colonial era legislation, plus Islamic Law. Areas may be subject to state and federal laws and to secular and religious laws. In most countries statutory law is written by politicians and passed by national legislature; and common law is compiled by judges (with reference to past cases and prior statutory law). Most legislation evolves in response to problems, so there is often delay between need and the establishment of satisfactory law. Without effective legislation, resource use, pollution control, conservation, and most fields of human activity are likely to fall into chaos and conflict. Law can encourage satisfactory performance, enable authorities to punish those who infringe environmental management legislation, or confiscate equipment that is misused or faulty, or close a company; it may also be possible for employees, bystanders and product or service users to sue for damages if they are harmed. Some countries have been active in developing environmental management law, notably Sweden, The Netherlands, the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Some environmental laws are ancient: Indian rulers promulgated controls on hunting and forest felling centuries ago; the UK had local pollution control laws as early as the twelfth century AD, and passed nationally enforced pollution control legislation like the Alkali Act (1863) over a century ago. Environmental management increasingly involves transboundary problems that reach beyond traditional sovereignty limits, issues of negligence, and the need for nations to co-operate. International law is evolving to address such issues, although it is difficult to develop and enforce (McAuslan, 1991). Often powerful MNCs or TNCs are involved in issues and these may prompt and drive forward innovation, not necessarily to the benefit of the environment or the public. Walker (1989: 30) likened them to seventeenth-century city states that had insufficient public accountability. The problem is to ensure that changes are for the good of the environment and the greater common good, rather than just suiting a large company or more countries. Most laws, whether civil or criminal, are corrective—punishing wrong-doers and deterring others from infringing rules and agreements or from causing nuisance or injury. In the main, therefore, legislation has not been very pre-emptive. Environmental managers must also be aware that there is little point in passing laws or making international agreements if there cannot be adequate enforcement. |
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