Title: Topic 7: Water pollution, solid waste and hazardous substances
1Topic 7 Water pollution, solid waste and
hazardous substances
- Control of major point and non-point pollution
problems
2Water pollution control
- Recreational benefits are much more important
for water pollution control than for air
pollution control. - Water and sewage treatment is more of an option
than on-site pollution control. - Pollution and contamination is just as much a
problem for groundwater as for surface water. - Water pollution control must increasingly take
into account both point and non-point sources of
pollution. - Increasingly problems of coastal and ocean
pollution, e.g. from oil spills and ocean dumping.
3Classifying water pollutants stock versus fund
pollutants
- fund pollutants
- Degradable organic residuals that are broken
down by bacteria, usually monitored by measuring
dissolved oxygen (DO) of the water or the
biological oxygen demand (BOD) caused by an
effluent. - Thermal injection of heat into water source
- Eutrophic excessive nutrients (nitrogen,
phosphorous) leading to too much aquatic plant
growth. - Persistent pollutants inorganic synthetic
chemicals that are only partially broken down - Bacteria, viruses, artificial hormones from
domestic and animal wastes - stock pollutants
- Inorganic chemical and minerals that cannot be
removed by natural processes (lead, cadmium,
mercury, some agrochemicals).
4Water pollution control in the US
- National effluent standards general standards
for broad categories of sources based on the
adoption of specific technologies by industrial
sector. - Problem 1 industries choose specific EPA
recommended technology rather than the best
technology to reduce discharges - Problem 2 uniform standards are not
cost-effective but do reduce administrative costs
of control.
- Subsidies for municipal waste treatment
- Problem 1 Subsidies are for construction but not
operation and maintenance - Problem 2 Construction costs tend to spiral out
of control
Doubtful that current US approach is very
cost-effective
5Alternative water pollution control policies
- Need for reform most studies suggest that the
uniform standards and treatment approach is
around 3 times more expensive than least-cost
control. - Relative little use of marketable pollution
permits for water pollution compared to air
pollution control. - Some European countries have demonstrated that
effluent charges are possible and can be
cost-effective. - Current laws do little to control nonpoint water
pollution, even though it may be possible to
reduce nitrogen, soil and agrochemical runoff
from farms and phosphorous from municipal waste. - Oil spills and ocean dumping are usually
controlled through the threat of litigation,
although there are high administrative costs for
the EPA pursuing court cases and liability
limitations of polluters.
6Solid waste and recycling
- Whether a by-product of the economic process is
classified as waste often depends upon economic
and technical characteristics of production, and
the potential for recycling. - Historically, greater reliance has been on new
or virgin materials rather than recycled
materials. - However, as land has become more scarce, disposal
costs rise and urban populations increase,
recovery and recycling of solid waste becomes an
option. - Economic feasibility of recycling also depends on
demand for recycled products, recovery and
recycling costs and the costs of virgin materials
over time.
7The economics of recycling aluminum cans
Price (/can)
Supply of cans from recycled material (SR)
Supply of cans from virgin material (Sv)
P1
Demand for cans (D)
Quantity of aluminum cans (Q)
Q1
Q2
Recycling ratio Q2/Q1
8Increasing the recycling ratio aluminum cans
(a) a tax on virgin materials
(b) investing in recycling
P
P
SR
SR
SR
SV
SV
SV
D
D
Q
Q2
Q1
Q
Q2
Q3
Q3
Q4
Q1
P
SR
(c) a fall in demand
SV
D
D
Q
Q2
Q3
Q1
9Toxic substances and hazardous wastes
- There are 2 million known chemical compounds, of
which 55,000 are in commercial use. - Many exhibit little or no toxicity, and even
those that are very toxic can pose little risk if
they are isolated. - Toxicity occurs when a living organism
experiences detrimental effects once exposed to a
substance. - Two main health effects of concern with toxic
substances are - risk of cancer
- effects on reproduction
10Toxicity, latency and uncertainty
- The latency of the exposure-effect relationship
is determined by the type of toxicity of the
substance - acute toxicity short-term exposure produces a
detrimental effect on the exposed organism. - chronic toxicity detrimental effect on exposed
organism arises only after prolonged and/or
continued exposure. - mutagen/carcinogenic if chronic toxicity leads
to abnormal cell growth, the substance is a
mutagen and is likely to be carcinogenic. - Uncertainty is a large factor in standards and
control - Lab tests are imperfect simulations for
real-world exposure. - Synergistic effects mean that other environmental
variables matter. - Biological magnification/accumulation, cocktail
effects may be significant factors in health
risks.
11Control policies and toxic contamination
- Occupational hazards Although studies suggest
that wages do contain a risk premium for more
risky occupations, the ability of a worker to
accept higher wages depends on information - Role of government enact laws requiring full
disclosure of occupational hazards. - Product risk Consumers can be exposed through
consuming a product, but consumer choice depends
on full information on product safety - Role of government should assure that consumers
receive adequate information on product risks. - Third party contamination - Uncompensated
environmental risk (externality) - Role of government require better information on
the risk and use the court system to impose
liability.
12Efficient control for toxic substances
- In contrast to air and water pollution, standards
and litigation may be an efficient control policy
for toxic substances. - Usual approach is to establish negligence
(failure to exercise due care) or strict
liability (if an activity is inherently
hazardous, liability automatically follows if
damage occurs). - Plaintiff must 1) identify the harmful
substance, 2) demonstrate that the defendant was
the source, and 3) prove that identifiable
damages resulted. - Litigation is weakest in dealing with large-scale
emissions of hazardous substances by many sources
that exposes large populations to risks. - Litigation is costly for plaintiffs and for
society in general
13Alternative mechanism assurance bonds
- Dated assurance bond required for any disposal
of hazardous waste, the amount paid depends on
the control authorities assessment of the costs
of environmental repair if future damage occurs
any time between posting date and refund date. - In case any site requires restoration as a result
of hazardous waste damage, the funds invested in
the bond could be used to finance the repair. - Any unused proceeds of the bond (plus interest)
would be refunded at a set future date. - Advantages
- Provides incentive to reduce hazardous/toxic
discharge, as less environmental damage means a
greater refund. - Ensures money is available for any clean-up
- Reduces costly litigation.
- Problems
- Requires knowledge of potential damages to
establish correct bond amount. - Funds should be sufficient for victim
compensation and repair.