Frameworks for Environmental Assessment and Indicators at the eea
Table 9.1. Some criteria for assessing environmental integration into
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Table 9.1. Some criteria for assessing environmental integration into
economic sector activities. A Institutional Integration 1 Are environmental objectives (e.g., maintenance of natural capital and ecological services) identified as key sectoral objectives and as important as economic and social objectives) in a sector integration strategy? 2 Are synergies between economic, environmental, and social objectives maximized? 3 Are trade-offs between environmental, economic, and social objectives minimized and transparent? 4 Are environmental targets (e.g., for eco-efficiency) and timetables agreed? Are there adequate resources to achieve the targets within the timetables? 5 Is there effective horizontal integration between the sector, environment, and other key authorities (e.g., finance and planning)? 6 Is there effective vertical integration between the EU, national, regional, and local administrations, including adequate public and other stakeholder information and participation measures? B Market Integration 7 Have environmental costs and benefits been quantified by common methods? 8 Have environmental costs been internalized into market prices through market-based instruments? 9 Have revenues from these market-based instruments been directly recycled to maxi- mize behavior change? 10 Have revenues from these market-based instruments been directly recycled to promote employment? 11 Have environmentally damaging subsidies and tax exemptions been withdrawn or refocused? 12 Have incentives been introduced that encourage environmental benefits? C Management Integration 13 Have environmental management systems been adopted? 14 Is there adequate strategic environmental assessment of policies, plans, and programs? 15 Is there adequate environmental impact assessment of projects before implementation? 16 Is there an effective green procurement (supply) program in public and private insti- tutions? 17 Is there an effective product and service program that maximizes eco-efficiency (e.g., via demand-side management, eco-labeling, products to services)? 18 Are there effective environmental agreements that engage stakeholders in maximizing eco-efficiency? (continued) Scope 67 FM, TEXT.qxd 3/28/07 2:44 PM Page 147 whole. Coherence is a prominent feature of good governance (RMNO/EEAC 2003) and SD. Therefore, it is now the EU’s SD strategy (European Commission 2001) and the EU governance agenda (European Commission 2001) that provide the broad framework for promoting the integration of economic, social, and environmental objectives in Europe. In practice this suggests a two-way integration, from environment into sectors and vice versa. However, EPI is specifically justified by the fact that envi- ronmental policy concerns have been persistently underemphasized in other policies. The more integrated and mutually reinforcing policies are in their formulation, the eas- ier their effective (and cost-efficient) delivery should be. In the EU context, coherence at the political and policy levels eases the work of the institutions and subsequent (national, regional, or local) implementation efforts (Peters 1998; Wandén 2003). The burden on individual actors is also reduced if regulatory requirements are streamlined. Ultimately, policy coordination makes it more likely that multiple objectives will be met. In this broader context, and in addition to the initial EEA EPI criteria, other attempts have been made to identify suitable ways to measure progress with integration. Prominent among these is the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Develop- ment checklist on policy coherence and integration for SD (OECD 2002). This check- list contains five groups of questions, related to understanding, commitment and lead- ership, steering, stakeholder involvement, and knowledge and scientific input. Other approaches include national SD strategies and EU integration strategies (Persson 2002; Dalal-Clayton 2004; Fergusson et al. 2001). The challenge still is to identify a small set of headline criteria and indicators that can be applied to assess progress at both the EU and the national levels, within differ- ent institutions, and relating to both cross-sectoral and sectoral efforts. Thus, building on past work, an evaluation framework for EPI was developed in 2003–2004 (Figure 9.1) from which a set of more concrete criteria were identified (Table 9.2). Presented as a checklist to ensure wide applicability, the criteria serve two main purposes: They provide a single framework for undertaking evaluations of EPI supporting consistency 148 | Methodological Aspects Download 1.58 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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