Environmental Management: Principles and practice
Partidário, 1996; Therivel, 1993; Therivel and Partidário, 1996; Horton and Memon
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Partidário, 1996; Therivel, 1993; Therivel and Partidário, 1996; Horton and Memon, 1997; Project Appraisal 7(3), 1992—special issue on strategic environmental assessment) (Figures 6.4 and 6.5). SEA can be applied: ♦ with a sectoral focus (e.g. to waste disposal, drainage and transport programmes; ♦ with a regional focus (e.g. to regional, rural and national plans); ♦ with an indirect focus (e.g. to technology, fiscal policies, justice and enforcement, sustainable development). SEA can be applied at a higher, earlier, more strategic tier of decision making than project EIA. Provision for SEA was made by NEPA in 1970 and in California’s Environmental Quality Act of 1985, and it is now in use in various countries, including Canada, The Netherlands, the USA (especially California), Germany and New Zealand. The Netherlands has had a statutory SEA system in force since 1987 for waste management, drinking water supply, energy and electricity, and some land use plans, and its formal requirements were strengthened in 1991 under the National Environmental Policy Act. New Zealand has had SEA laws since 1991, under Part V of the Resource Management Act (1995). The EEC and the UK published proposals for SEA in 1991 (although Therivel et al., 1992:32 note that in the UK poor long- term strategic planning will probably make the adoption of SEA difficult). Since 1995 the EU has been moving towards requiring member states to adopt SEA procedures and the World Bank also supports it. SEA is useful for site selection and by conducting such a ‘higher order’ assessment there may be less need for, and less depth required from, component CHAPTER SIX 122 FIGURE 6.4 A comparison of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) and environmental impact assessment (EIA) Note: EIS=environmental impact statement ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT, HAZARD AND RISK MANAGEMENT 123 project EIAs. The SEA approach may cope better with cumulative impacts, assessment of alternatives and mitigation measures than standard EIA. It is claimed that SEA can ensure that EIA is initiated at the correct point in the planning cycle and therefore makes it easier to pursue sustainable development by helping prevent problems that are difficult to reverse. Increasingly SEA is seen as a key approach for implementing the concept of sustainable development, because it allows the principle of sustainability to be carried down from policies to individual projects (Therivel et al., 1992:22; 126). SEA, at least in principle, can enable countries to work together on transboundary problems (see earlier discussion of transboundary EIA). FIGURE 6.5 Stages in links between policy-, plan- and programme-making and strategic environmental assessment (SEA) Source: Therival and Partidário (1996: Fig. 1.1) CHAPTER SIX 124 SEA is more demanding of data and expertise than mainstream EIA, but this is less of a problem if it overcomes many of the limitations of the latter. A difficulty faced by SEA is that programmes evolve in a subtle way, and at a given moment it may not be easy to see what actually constitutes a programme. Another problem is that policy makers may not want to give potential opponents or competitors a perspective of their strategy, so public involvement is a problem. Methodology is in need of development. SEA must make accurate assessments in spite of often vague proposals and policies (compared with the project-level situation), and it must cope with often uncertain system boundaries; limited information on existing and future developments; a large number of possible alternatives to consider; the involvement of a number of, possibly unco-operative, bodies; and possibly more political pressures than are felt by EIA. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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