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Environmental Law

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Chapter 18 Environmental Law Resource Law Water Surface Water Law Navigable streams are treated as community property Individual ownership not allowed Water rights ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Law


1
Environmental Law
  • Chapter 18

2
Resource LawWater
  • Surface Water Law
  • Navigable streams are treated as community
    property
  • Individual ownership not allowed
  • Water rights are allowed
  • Riparian Doctrine who ever owns land adjacent
    to a stream has a right to use that water more
    applicable to humid eastern U.S.
  • Doctrine of Prior Appropriation first user of
    the water has top priority more applicable to
    arid western U.S.

3
Figure 18.1 Distribution of underlying principles
of surface-water law
4
Resource LawWater
  • Groundwater Law
  • More complex than surface water law
  • Rule of Capture (English Rule)
  • Property owners have the right to extract all the
    groundwater from under their property
  • Lateral movement of ground water is ignored
  • Rule of Reasonable Use (American Rule)
  • Property owners are limited to extract ground
    water for beneficial use in connection with the
    land above. Extraction of ground water should
    not be so great that it deprives a neighbor of
    their ground water
  • Issues have been argued about what constitutes
    beneficial use
  • Problems with invisibility of ground water has
    created numerous legal conflicts

5
Figure 18.2 Distribution of underlying principles
of groundwater law
6
Resource LawMineral and Fuel
  • In U.S. original laws were meant to encourage the
    exploitation of natural resources
  • 1872 Mining Law
  • Granted mineral rights, and often land title, to
    anyone locating a mineral deposit on federal land
    and would invest some time and a little money in
    the claim
  • Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 and Mineral Leasing
    Act for Acquired Lands of 1947 restricted the
    previous land giveaway.
  • Treatment for certain commodities such as oil,
    gas, coal, potash, and phosphate deposits became
    restricted
  • Mine reclamation not seriously addressed until
    1977

7
Figure 18.3 Federal land ownership
8
Resource LawMineral and Fuel
  • Mine Reclamation
  • Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of
    1977 applied to coal only
  • Intended to restore farmland and ground water
    flow once mining ceased
  • Several states have enacted their own laws
    regulating mining within their boundaries
  • No state has received financial returns form
    mineral extraction on federal lands
  • However, states must contend with a variety of
    pollution problems that mining has produced

9
International Resource Disputes
  • Mineral claims at sea have often become issues of
    serious dispute
  • Traditional 3 mile (5 km) territorial limits
    proved unsatisfactory as modern technology allows
    for deeper exploitation of many commodities
  • 200 mile territorial limits were established but
    many small closely packed countries did not
    benefit

10
International Resource Disputes
  • Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the
    Sea (1982)
  • Established a 12 mile territorial limit plus
    various navigational, fishing, and other rights
  • Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs)
  • Established a 200 nautical mile exclusive mineral
    rights use zone
  • A provision could allow a country to claim more
    continental shelf/ocean floor and extend their EEZ

11
Figure 18.4 Exclusive Economic Zone of the
United States
12
Figure 18.5 Possible mineral and rock resources
in EEZ of the United States
13
International Resource Disputes
  • Antarctica has been claimed by many countries
    because of their respective exploration
    activities or geographic proximity
  • Treaty of 1961 set aside all territorial claims
    by the signing countries other have signed on
    subsequently
  • Convention for the Regulation of Antarctic
    Mineral Resources Activities (CRAMRA) in 1988
    established restrictive controls on Antarctica
    mineral exploration and extraction
  • CRAMRA not fully accepted by U.S.
  • U.S. passes Antarctic Protection Act of 1990 and
    encourages others to sign on
  • U.S. EPA issues Environmental Impact Statement
    (EIS) rules on non-government activities such as
    scientific study and tourism in Antarctica

14
Figure 18.6 Land Claims in Antarctica prior to
the 1961 treaty
15
Pollution and Its Control
  • Do we have a right to a clean environment?
  • Criminal Law requires legislation by Federal
    and State government
  • Civil Law not so restrictive it has been the
    best route to seek justice in many cases

16
Water Pollution
  • Refuse Act of 1899 prohibited dumping or
    discharge of refuse in navigable water
  • Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1956
    focused on municipal waste treatment
  • Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970 and Clean
    Water Act of 1977 addressed spills and chemical
    pollutants
  • Subsequent legislative actions have modified many
    provisions of these laws but few major
    improvements, or overhauls, have occurred

17
Table 18.1
18
Air Pollution
  • Clean Air Act of 1963 empowered federal
    agencies to undertake air pollution control
    efforts
  • Amended in 1965 to allow national regulation of
    motor vehicle emissions
  • Air Quality Act of 1965
  • required air quality standards on known harmful
    effects of several air pollutants
  • Goal was to protect and enhance the quality of
    the Nations air resources so as to promote the
    public health and welfare and the productive
    capacity of its population
  • Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) of 1990 is more
    restrictive than previous act

19
Figure 18.7 a
20
Figure 18.7 b
21
Waste Disposal
  • Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965 and Resource
    Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) of 1976
  • Intended to help state and local governments deal
    with disposal of municipal solid wastes
  • EPA monitors the compliance with these acts
  • RCRA amended in 1984 - imposed new requirements
    on landfills and disposal sites banned disposal
    of toxic liquid waste at a landfill
  • RCRA re-authorization of 1992 failed additional
    regulation for broader pollution controls and
    mining waste are needed
  • Funding for identified toxic waste sites is
    needed to continue the work that the superfund
    program began

22
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  • Established in 1970 - responsible for
    establishment and enforcement of air and water
    quality standards requires testing and
    regulation of toxic chemical substances entering
    the environment
  • Enforcement activities often limited by budgetary
    restrictions and political factors

23
Figure 18.8
24
International Initiatives
  • U.N. Convention to Combat Desertification of 1996
    addressed localized problems found around the
    world
  • U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change
    recognizes the role of CO2 and other greenhouse
    gases in global warming
  • Encourages nations to report their CO2 emissions
  • Encourages developed nations to assist developing
    nations to address increasing dumping of CO2 into
    the atmosphere

25
Figure 18.9
26
International Initiatives
  • Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
    Ozone Layer (of 1987)
  • An attempt to have all nations recognize the need
    for international commitments to pollution
    control for everyone's benefit
  • This effort represent a new movement, based on a
    precautionary principle, that international law
    and diplomacy must work to correct serious
    environmental problems
  • Kyoto Protocol of 1997 an attempt to have
    industrialize nations agree to reduce
    greenhouse-gas emissions 5.2 below 1990 levels
    by 2008-2012
  • U.S. expressed concerns over the economic impact
    of such a move and did not agree to these
    standards

27
International Initiatives
  • The U.N. has recognized, in the various protocols
    and attempts at creating international
    environmental law, that we all share the global
    environment
  • Some nations contribute more to the various
    problems than do others
  • The countries that create more of the harmful
    emissions can better afford to work to reduce
    their emissions and to assist the developing
    countries to reduce their emissions

28
Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Our attempts to legislate economic treatments, or
    use of technology, resulted in more conflicts and
    enforcement problems
  • Laws and legislation create a myriad of legal
    maneuver room so companies, countries, and
    individuals can escape their respective
    responsibility
  • we lack the economic technology
  • the science isnt clear
  • It is too expensive
  • there will be not benefit if we use this
    technology
  • this clause will allow us to avoid our
    responsibility
  • And other excuses
  • In some cases it is cheaper to pay the fine than
    to correct the problem

29
Figure 18.10 Components of EPAs risk-assessment
process for potential health hazards
30
Cost-Benefit AnalysisFederal Government
  • President Reagans Executive Order 12291 (in
    1981) allowed the following
  • A (pollution control) regulation may be put forth
    only if the potential benefits to society
    outweigh the potential cost
  • This in effect weakened such legislation as the
    Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act

31
Laws Relating to Geologic Hazards
  • Laws, or zoning ordinances, restricting
    construction or establishing construction
    standards related to known geologic hazards have
    been opposed
  • Investment concerns
  • Development concerns
  • Lack of understanding by the general public
  • Construction controls and restrictive building
    standards in earthquake prone areas have
    experienced success
  • Many California earthquakes, since the Long Beach
    earthquake of 1933 nearly destroyed that city,
    have not destroyed as much property as they could
    have
  • San Fernando 1971
  • Loma Prieta - 1989
  • Northridge 1994

32
Figure 18.11 Effects of improving building codes
for earthquake resistance
33
Not All Hazard Responses Work
  • Too many issues left to local officials to decide
    what is an acceptable risk for their
    communities
  • Some laws apply only to new construction and
    allow schools to be built on flood plains or in
    seismically active areas
  • Some legislation passes the fiscal risk on to all
    tax payers through federally funded insurance
    programs

34
(No Transcript)
35
Figure 18.12 Hazard-mitigation legislation
36
Figure 18.13
37
Figure 18.14
38
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
  • NEPA enacted in 1969 and established
    environmental protection - an important national
    priority
  • Established the Council on Environmental Quality
    in the Executive Office of the President
  • Established the requirements for Environmental
    Impact Statements (EIS)
  • Applies only to federal projects
  • many states have adopted EIS procedures and rules
    also

39
Environmental Impact Statements
  • NEPA specifies that an EIS should include
  • A description of the proposed action, its
    purpose, and why it is needed
  • A discussion of various alternatives (including
    the proposed action)
  • An indication of the environment to be affected
    and the environmental consequences anticipated
  • List of preparers of the statement and those
    agencies, organizations, or persons to whom
    copies of the statement are being sent

40
Figure 18.15 Number of EISs
41
Figure 18.16 Distribution of EIS filings with
EPA in 1994
42
Figure 18.17 the Trans-Alaska pipeline
43
Figures 18.18 a and b Route of the Trans-Alaska
pipeline and proposed alternative means for
transport of the oil
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