Pollution Markets in a Green Country Town: Urban Environmental Management in Transition
By (Author) Roger Raufer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th May 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Pollution and threats to the environment
363.735250974811
Hardback
288
The brave new world of environmental economics--complete with pollution markets, emission brokers, and commodity auctions of emission allowances--has been developing in the U.S. for several decades. This book traces the evolution of such environmental management techniques in industrial Philadelpia. Initially as a "greene country towne," the city's development led to significatn pollution concerns, including rivers filled with sewage, typhoid deaths, and smoky plumes from coal combustion. Technological pollution controls improved conditions, but blunt regulatory tools eventually evolved into more refined economic approaches. This book describes that transition and the economic mechanisms that have emerged in recent decades, as well as prospective markets for ozone precursors, greenhouse gas emissions, and environmental risk (potentially offering what one pundt labeled "cancer futures"). In doing so, it presents a comprehensive overview--from old to new--of urban environmental management.
.,."a well-researched piece of work...a very interesting and informative book....This reviewer recommends it highly as required reading for any serious student interested in environmental planning, water quality management, risk research and environmental engineering policy making."-Natural Resources Forum
"Raufer offers wise observations about the involvement, since the 1960s, of the federal government and citizen environmental organizations in the contentious politics of the urban environment and comments on the increased influence of the fickle mass media....Raufer is persuasive, from the perspective of quantitative management assessment, in claiming that the paleotechnic era accomplished more extensive environmental cleanups, and saved far more lives, than neotechnic attempts at remediation....[A] fine book."-ISIS
...a well-researched piece of work...a very interesting and informative book....This reviewer recommends it highly as required reading for any serious student interested in environmental planning, water quality management, risk research and environmental engineering policy making.-Natural Resources Forum
Policy types interested in environmental history and the evolving application of environmental management techniques will find this to be an interesting and informative book.-Choice
Raufer offers wise observations about the involvement, since the 1960s, of the federal government and citizen environmental organizations in the contentious politics of the urban environment and comments on the increased influence of the fickle mass media....Raufer is persuasive, from the perspective of quantitative management assessment, in claiming that the paleotechnic era accomplished more extensive environmental cleanups, and saved far more lives, than neotechnic attempts at remediation....[A] fine book.-ISIS
..."a well-researched piece of work...a very interesting and informative book....This reviewer recommends it highly as required reading for any serious student interested in environmental planning, water quality management, risk research and environmental engineering policy making."-Natural Resources Forum
"Policy types interested in environmental history and the evolving application of environmental management techniques will find this to be an interesting and informative book."-Choice
ROGER K. RAUFER is an independent consulting engineer and an Adjunct Professor at the University of Pennsylvania.-He holds degrees in chemical engineering, environmental engineering, political science, and energy management. Coauthor of the book Acid Rain and Emissions Trading (1987), which helped develop the market-based approach for acid rain control adopted in the U.S. in 1990, he is currently assisting the United Nations with pollution control in four Chinese cities.