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The Problem of Resource use and Quality of the Environment, Some Policy Issues: The Possibility of the Application of Effluent Charge in Maine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2020

J. Delphendahl*
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maine, Orono
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Extract

The beginning of the last third of the twentieth century can generally be characterized by a broad public awareness of the increasing deterioration of the natural environment, especially of the quality of air and water resources. The degradation of the quality of the natural resources has thus emerged as a public policy issue. The Federal and state governments responded to this public concern through the creation of various policy programs and administrative agencies. The environmental protection agency of the federal government is an example of a nationwide effort to establish policies related to the quality of the environmental resources. Many states established the legal framework within which administrative agencies could execute policies and ordinances related to the quality of environmental resources. Legislation recently passed by the Maine Legislature will be cited as examples. The site selection law specifies that the Environmental Improvement Commission must issue or deny a license for any commercial or industrial development which requires a land area of 20 or more acres; for structures in excess of a ground area of 60,000 square feet, for drilling or excavating natural resources (pits requiring an area of more than 5 acres). The recent denial of the application of Maine Clean Fuels, Inc., to construct a $200 million oil refinery on Sears Island, off the coast, attracted national attention. The vast majority of the project applications processed, however, are small in value and in size though their total impact on the environmental resource of the state are potential.

Type
Natural Resource Economics
Copyright
Copyright © Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

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References

1/ Summary of application processed, March 1970 to August 1971. Acreage: 16,732 - mostly for housing: seasonal 41%, mobile homes 12%, lodging 8%, permanent housing 22%. The remaining 17% for other type development. Source: Maine Environmental Improvement Commission, Augusta, Maine, September, 1971.Google Scholar

2/ These are geographic areas laid out in townships, although not settled; thus without a municipal government. The land area is privately owned.Google Scholar

3/ The author spent several weeks during the summer months of 1971 in the Ruhr-Emscher area to familarize himself with the operation of effluent charges, and their relation to management objectives.Google Scholar

4/ The report of the Penobscot River Study will be available about August 1, 1972.Google Scholar

5/ For details see Allen V. Kneese and Blain T. Bower: Managing Water Quality: Economics, Technology, Institution. Johns Hopkins Press 1968, pp. 237-53.Google Scholar

6/ “Genossenschaft” has power to tax; police power to manage entire water supply of the area; has also the power eminent domain.Google Scholar