Air is a part of all of our lives. Without clean air, nothing we know of can exist. The
debate over clean air, it's regulations, their teammates and opposition, and the economic
factors coming into play into this ever-more recognizable problem is a widespread and
ever more controversial one. Like a long countdown to eventual disaster, the pollution
effecting our world has no doubt made increasingly more impact on our daily lives, and
has increased the intensity on Washington and other countries to solve the problem. The
Clean Air act is a step in the right direction, but with every answer their comes two
questions and likewise more and more people taking sides. There have been long debates
not over the effectiveness of such regulations, but the lack of opportunity such
regulations and deregulations provide for other companies. Global warming has increased
the tension over the economics of cleaner air, but with little the government can do to
limit the use of cars, the production of necessary coal-fired power plants and other such
human resources, the topic just turns into another fog for debate and argument over
stricter regulations and the impeached right these sources have to operate. The
continual power struggle of such economic and social issues and the debate over the
effectiveness of stricter, present or more lenient regulations has turned into a
smorgasboard of prectical solutions, with opponents quickly changing minds and becoming
supporters and vice-versa.
The expenditure of about 20 billion on the part of companies since 1990 to clean up
such hazardous pollutants as cars, factories, and thousands of other measures have reaped
about 400 billion in saved hospital costs, lost workdays, reduced productivity, and other
conditions while at the same time theoretically helping to reduce smog and pollution.
The findings of a report on experiments done for the Clean Air act was passed into law in
1970. The Enviornmental Protection Agency has recently come under attack by critics
however, and Washington has threatened to cut the agencies' budget citing high costs of
enviornmental legislation, even while their is solid proof that the agencies' measures
are paying off. Congress is skeptical of reports that the whole system is reaping more
benefits on the enviorment than the whole operation actually costs.
Economically, the Clean Air Act is definitly sound and good for the economy. For
example, American fishermen average $24 billion a year in expenditures and ultimately
generate $69 billion yearly for the economy. Moreover, the average American worker
recieves $20 in value in reduced risks of death, illness, and other adverse effects for
every dollar spent to control air pollution. All in all, the country spent roughly $436
billion enforcing clean air regulations, and gained about $6.8 trillion in benefits in
1990. The amounts of harmful chemicals and pollutants in the air has also found to be
dramatically reduced since 1970. 40 percent of sulfer dioxide in the air has been
reduced, as well as 30 percent of nitrous oxide, and 50 percent of carbon monoxide.
As well as air, the EPA has produced results in protecting our nation's waterways. For
example, the Clean Water Act, which passed in 1972, has since given states grants of $66
million to help install water sewage treatment plants. They also found that the act has
required the industry to install tens of billions of dollars of anti-polltion technology.
The effect on the liquid industry has been enormous. Boating sales generate $14 billion
alone while fishermen produce $3 million, and the nation spends an estimated $35 million
anually for fish.
The economics of the Clean Air Act and the regulations pioneered by the EPA have set
new standards for the production of companies. Under the current regulations, there is a
set amount of pollution that can be produced in the U.S. each year. The units of
pollution, or credits, are distributed evenly among production companies, mining
factories, and other producers of such externalities based on size, output and strength
in the industry. Companies are allowed to sell their credits if they want, which enables
companies whose pollution rates exceeds their limit in a particular area to still operate
in a particular area to still operate efficiently while not exceeding their maximum level
of pollution output.
There are many arguments for and against this method of regulation. The bigger and
richer companies get to produce the most pollution in the end while the current system
alienates newer, more finantially strapped firms. What makes the current system more
unfair is that the emission allotments of certain states are more lenient than others.
For example, in Western Pennsylvania, there are strict regulations on emission output
levels, while 35 miles west in Ohio, there are more lenient levels of precautions. The
results of this is that many companies don't look to move or produce in PA and would
rather just do so in Ohio. The results have been disastrous for the Western Penn.
economy. This system with seemingly limitless updates and new precautions are cutting
back on jobs and increasing overall unemployment.
Theorists contend that in a market driven economy, competition alone serves as an
adequate regulatory device. Make a poor product or price it too high and your
competitors will make more money. Better yet, with less regulations, businesses have
more money to grow faster, hire more employees and offer greater returns to shareholders.
Money that can be spent on cleaning pollution up is often just spend on litigation. The
lawyers get paid protecting the precautions, while the dump just stays put. That money
in turn would have been channeled more effectively if there were less precautions. Many
people contend however, that precautions are supposed to be a burden and that keeps
businesses from doing what they want to do, which is the primary nature of any law.
As with any environmental protection regulation nowadays, the regulations imposed on
cars, coal-fired power plants and other human resources in an attempt to thwart or at
least slow down the effects of global warming, has met with angry responses from the
domestic oil, coal, and utilities industry. The United Mine Workers, a key member of the
labor coalition that supported President Clinton's reelection has also registered it's
concerns.
The supporters of these measures have valid arguments for the precautions they expect
to be signed into law sometime this year. The burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil,
and their products such as gasoline, produces carbon monoxide, a greenhouse gas which can
build up in the atmosphere. Scientists believe that the continual buildup of these
compounds could lead to devastating climate changes in the next century unless their
buildup is slowed. Opponents of the new precautions believe that the new precautions
could lead to the deindustrialization of the U.S. and unless stopped, the entire world.
Shifting the world away from fossil fuels also provides enormous economic, political,
and diplomatic challenges. Many developing nations such as China are dependent on
coal-generated power to drive their economic growth over the next several decades. U.S.
utilities uses coal to produce more than half of the nation's electricity. Plentiful
U.S. coal supplies have also meant power for many U.S. companies where coal is
plentiful.
Air and water are concrete parts of all of our lives. With the destruction and
continual pollution being pumped into our ecosystem, who knows how long it will be before
the whole world is contaminated to the point where we can no longer live in it. The
beuracrats in Washington don't have all the answers, neither do the unions, or the big
corporations. The idea and impact of pollution is like a time-bomb waiting to explode,
and the end draws nearer and nearer. We cannot look back on our world after we have
destroyed it and comment on things we should have done differently.
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