Policy instrument choice and diffuse source pollution
Date
2005
Authors
Gunningham, Neil
Sinclair, Darren
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Abstract
In summary, planning processes can be effective in reducing diffuse pollution, by taking advantage of catchment-wide insights about environmental hot spots such as nutrient sensitive areas and, through mechanisms such as state or regional plans or local zoning requirements, restricting the range of acceptable activities in those areas. This will not only be effective in prohibiting or restricting activities that contribute disproportionately to diffuse pollution, it will also likely be cost-effective in doing so, since it is only environmentally sensitive areas that will be targeted and only high risk activities within them. It is, nevertheless, a strategy of limited value given that in many areas, activities are already taking place that are environmentally inappropriate and the planning system, with its prospective nature, provides no mechanism for dealing with them. One considerable attraction of the Nitrates Directive is that is applies to existing as well as future uses, and for this reason, has a considerably broader reach.
Description
Keywords
Keywords: environmental legislation; planning process; policy strategy; pollution control; pollution policy; Eastern Hemisphere; Eurasia; Europe; United Kingdom; Western Europe; World
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Environmental Law
Type
Journal article