Coastal Management - US Related: 1998
Publications
Author:
Letson, D., Suman, D., and Shivlani, M.
Title: Pollution prevention in the coastal zone: An
exploratory essay with case studies.
Publication: Coastal Management
26(3): 157-175, 1998.
© Taylor & Francis
Notes: In the
past decade, national and international pollution policies have
increasingly opted for prevention over remediation. As an
anticipatory, comprehensive approach that might save money and
avoid end-of-pipe regulations, pollution prevention (P2) warrants
careful consideration. We focus on the coastal zone because of its
unique geographical characteristics, its ecological and economic
importance, and the increasing pressures on its integrity Over the
past 25 years, U.S. legislation has increasingly embraced P2
principles in the management of coastal environments. Four case
studies illustrate P2's prospects for the variety of pollution
problems within the coastal zone: Boston Harbor (wastewater);
Chesapeake Bay (nutrients); Broward County, Florida's P2 program
for marinas (toxic substances); and the cruise line industry
(solid waste). These case studies represent a range of
circumstances in the coastal zone: a number of pollutants; point
and nonpoint sources; land-based and ocean-based sources;
mandatory versus voluntary P2 approaches; localized and regional
approaches; small-scale versus large-scale responses; and
pollutant-generating activities that range from agriculture and
wastewater treatment to maritime transportation. These examples
illustrate that P2 potentially enjoys wide applicability in
coastal pollution management. If environmental policy continues
its long-term trend toward an anticipatory, voluntary, and
cross-media emphasis, P2 will increasingly influence coastal
management. However, anticipatory and comprehensive are not always
better, and sources do not always volunteer to reduce. Significant
obstacles to adoption of P2 may be economic, political, or social.
Economic challenges include weak incentives to adopt clean
technologies and the absence of a systematic accounting that
considers the positive values of enhanced environmental amenities.
Political obstacles arise through lack of grassroots acceptance of
P2, weak political will, and enforcement difficulties. Nor are all
P2 solutions socially acceptable. Despite these obstacles, P2
offers a comprehensive, integrated, holistic approach to pollution
management that fits well with models of effective integrated
coastal management.
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