Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Tools for environmental impact and damage assessment
- 3 Exposure–response functions for health impacts
- 4 Impacts of air pollution on building materials
- 5 Agriculture, forests and ecosystems
- 6 Other impacts
- 7 Atmospheric dispersion of pollutants
- 8 Multimedia pathways
- 9 Monetary valuation
- 10 The costs of climate change
- 11 Uncertainty of damage costs
- 12 Key assumptions and results for cost per kg of pollutant
- 13 Results for power plants
- 14 Results for waste treatment
- 15 Results for transport
- 16 Lessons for policy makers
- Appendix A Nomenclature, symbols, units and conversion factors
- Appendix B Description of the RiskPoll software
- Appendix C Equations for multimedia model of Chapter 8
- Index
- References
1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Tools for environmental impact and damage assessment
- 3 Exposure–response functions for health impacts
- 4 Impacts of air pollution on building materials
- 5 Agriculture, forests and ecosystems
- 6 Other impacts
- 7 Atmospheric dispersion of pollutants
- 8 Multimedia pathways
- 9 Monetary valuation
- 10 The costs of climate change
- 11 Uncertainty of damage costs
- 12 Key assumptions and results for cost per kg of pollutant
- 13 Results for power plants
- 14 Results for waste treatment
- 15 Results for transport
- 16 Lessons for policy makers
- Appendix A Nomenclature, symbols, units and conversion factors
- Appendix B Description of the RiskPoll software
- Appendix C Equations for multimedia model of Chapter 8
- Index
- References
Summary
The responsibility of those who exercise power in a democratic society is not to reflect inflamed public feeling but to help form its understanding
Felix Frankfurter (former Supreme Court Justice) (1928) Carved in stone on the wall of the Federal Court House, BostonSummary
In this chapter we explain why one needs to evaluate environmental costs and benefits. Cost–benefit analysis (CBA) is necessary for many choices relating to public policy, especially in the field of environmental protection, to avoid costly mistakes. Even when other, non-monetary criteria must also be taken into account, a CBA should be carried out whenever appropriate. Without a monetary evaluation of damage costs one can only do a cost-effectiveness analysis, as illustrated in Section 1.3. In Section 1.4 we explain how to determine the optimal level of pollution abatement, as a simple example of the use of a CBA. Impact pathway analysis (IPA), the methodology for quantifying damage costs or environmental benefits, is sketched in Section 1.5. The internalization of external costs is addressed in Section 1.6.
Why quantify environmental benefits?
The answer emerges through asking another question: “how else can we decide how much to spend to protect the environment?” The simple demand for “zero pollution” sometimes made by well-meaning but naïve environmentalists is totally unrealistic: our economy would be paralyzed because the technologies for perfectly clean production do not exist.
In the past, most decisions about environmental policy were made without quantifying the benefits. During the 1960s and 1970s increasing pollution and growing prosperity led to increased demand for cleaner air, and at the same time there was sufficient technological progress in the development of equipment such as flue gas desulfurization to allow cleanup without prohibitive costs. The demand for cleanup became overwhelming and environmental regulations were imposed with no cost– benefit analysis.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- How Much Is Clean Air Worth?Calculating the Benefits of Pollution Control, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014
References
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