fbpx
Wikipedia

Environmental impact assessment

Environmental Impact assessment (EIA) is the assessment of the environmental consequences of a plan, policy, program, or actual projects prior to the decision to move forward with the proposed action. In this context, the term "environmental impact assessment" is usually used when applied to actual projects by individuals or companies and the term "strategic environmental assessment" (SEA) applies to policies, plans and programmes most often proposed by organs of state.[1][2] It is a tool of environmental management forming a part of project approval and decision-making.[3] Environmental assessments may be governed by rules of administrative procedure regarding public participation and documentation of decision making, and may be subject to judicial review.

The purpose of the assessment is to ensure that decision-makers consider the environmental impacts when deciding whether or not to proceed with a project. The International Association for Impact Assessment (IAIA) defines an environmental impact assessment as "the process of identifying, predicting, evaluating and mitigating the biophysical, social, and other relevant effects of development proposals prior to major decisions being taken and commitments made".[4] EIAs are unique in that they do not require adherence to a predetermined environmental outcome, but rather they require decision-makers to account for environmental values in their decisions and to justify those decisions in light of detailed environmental studies and public comments on the potential environmental impacts.[5]

History

Environmental Impact Assessments commenced in the 1960s, as part of increasing environmental awareness.[6] An EIA is prepared to estimate the effects of a proposed development or construction project. EIA provides technical evaluations that are intended to contribute to more objective decision making. In the United States, EIA obtained formal status in 1969, with the enactment of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). EIAs have been used increasingly around the world. The number of environmental assessments filed every year "has vastly overtaken the number of more rigorous Environmental Impact Statements (EIS)."[7] An environmental assessment is a "mini-Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) designed to provide sufficient information to allow the agency to decide whether the preparation of a full-blown Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is necessary."[8][9]

Methods

General and industry specific assessment methods are available including:

  • Industrial products – Product environmental life cycle analysis (LCA) is used for identifying and measuring the impact of industrial products on the environment. These EIAs consider activities related to extraction of raw materials, ancillary materials, equipment; production, use, disposal and ancillary equipment.[10]
  • Genetically modified plants – Specific methods available to perform EIAs of genetically modified organisms include GMP-RAM and INOVA.[11]
  • Fuzzy logic – EIA methods need measurement data to estimate values of impact indicators. However, many of the environment impacts cannot be quantified, e.g. landscape quality, lifestyle quality and social acceptance. Instead, information from similar EIAs, expert judgment and community sentiment are employed. Approximate reasoning methods known as fuzzy logic can be used.[12] A fuzzy arithmetic approach has also been proposed[13] and implemented using a software tool (TDEIA).[14]

Follow-up

At the end of the project, an audit evaluates the accuracy of the EIA by comparing actual to predicted impacts. The objective is to make future EIAs more valid and effective. Two primary considerations are:

  • Scientific – to examine the accuracy of predictions and explain errors[citation needed]
  • Management – to assess the success of mitigation in reducing impacts[citation needed]

Audits can be performed either as a rigorous assessment of the null hypothesis or with a simpler approach comparing what actually occurred against the predictions in the EIA document.[15]

After an EIA, the precautionary and polluter pays principles may be applied to decide whether to reject, modify or require strict liability or insurance coverage to a project, based on predicted harms.[citation needed]

The Hydropower Sustainability Assessment Protocol is a sector-specific method for checking the quality of Environmental and Social assessments and management plans.[citation needed]

Around the world

Australia

The history of EIA in Australia could be linked to the enactment of the U.S. National Environment Policy Act (NEPA) in 1970, which made the preparation of environmental impact statements a requirement. In Australia, one might say that the EIA procedures were introduced at a State Level prior to that of the Commonwealth (Federal), with a majority of the states having divergent views to the Commonwealth. One of the pioneering states was New South Wales, whose State Pollution Control Commission issued EIA guidelines in 1974. At a Commonwealth (i.e. Federal) level, this was followed by passing of the Environment Protection (Impact of Proposals) Act 1974 (Cth) in 1974. The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cth) (EPBC Act) superseded the Environment Protection (Impact of Proposals) Act 1974 (Cth) and is the current central piece for EIA in Australia on a Commonwealth (i.e. Federal) level. An important point to note is that this federal legislation does not override the validity of the States or Territories environmental and development assessments and approvals; rather the EPBC Act runs as a parallel to the State/Territory Systems.[16] Overlap between federal and state requirements is addressed via bilateral agreements or one-off accreditation of state processes, as provided for in the EPBC Act.[citation needed]

The Commonwealth Level

The EPBC Act provides a legal framework to protect and manage nationally and internationally important flora, fauna, ecological communities and heritage places. It defines this as matters of "national environmental significance". The following are the nine matters of such significance:[17]

  • World Heritage properties;
  • National Heritage places;
  • Wetlands of international importance (listed under the Ramsar Convention);
  • Listed threatened species and ecological communities;
  • Migratory species protected under international agreements;
  • Commonwealth marine areas;
  • the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park;
  • Nuclear actions (including uranium mining); and
  • Water resources, in relation with coal seam gas development and large coal mining development.

In addition to this, the EPBC Act aims at providing a streamlined national assessment and approval process for activities. These activities could be by the Commonwealth, or its agents, anywhere in the world or activities on Commonwealth land; and activities that are listed as having a ‘significant impact’ on matters of ‘national environment significance'.[17]

The EPBC Act comes into play when a person (a proponent) wants an action (often called "a proposal" or "a project") assessed for environmental impacts under the EPBC Act, he or she must refer the project to the Department of the Environment and Energy (Commonwealth). This referral is then released to the public and the relevant state, territory and Commonwealth ministers, for comment on whether the project is likely to have a significant impact on matters of national environmental significance.[17] The Department of the Environment and Energy assess the process and makes recommendation to the minister or the delegate for the feasibility. The final discretion on the decision remains of the minister, which is not solely based on matters of national environmental significance but also on the consideration of social and economic impact of the project.[17]

The Australian Government Minister for the Environment and Energy cannot intervene in a proposal if it has no significant impact on one of the eight matters of national environmental significance, regardless of any other undesirable environmental impacts.[17] This is primarily due to the division of powers between the states and the Federal government, and the Australian Government environment minister not being able to overturn a state decision.[citation needed]

There are strict civil and criminal penalties for the breach of EPBC Act. Depending on the kind of breach, civil penalty (maximum) may go up to $550,000 for an individual and $5.5 million for a body corporate, or for criminal penalty (maximum) of seven years imprisonment and/or penalty of $46,200.[17]

The State and Territory Level

Australian Capital Territory (ACT)

EIA provisions within Ministerial Authorities in the ACT are found in the Chapters 7 and 8 of the Planning and Development Act 2007 (ACT). EIA in ACT was previously administered with the help of Part 4 of the Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991 (Land Act) and Territory Plan (plan for land-use).[16] Note that some EIA may occur in the ACT on Commonwealth land under the EPBC Act (Cth). Further provisions of the Australian Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Act 1988 (Cth) may also be applicable particularly to national land and "designated areas".[citation needed]

New South Wales (NSW)

In New South Wales, the Environment Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (EP&A Act) establishes two pathways for EIA. The first is under Division 5.2 of the EP&A Act, which provides for EIA of 'State Significant Infrastructure' projects (from June 2011, this Part replaced the previous Part 3A, which previously covered EIA of major projects). The second is under Part 4 of the EP&A Act dealing with development assessments for local, regional, and State Significant Developments (other than State Significant Infrastructure).[16]

Northern Territory (NT)

The EIA process in Northern Territory is chiefly administered under the Environmental Assessment Act (EAA).[18] Although EAA is the primary tool for EIA in Northern Territory, there are further provisions for proposals in the Inquiries Act 1985 (NT).[16]

Queensland (QLD)

There are four main EIA processes in Queensland.[19] Firstly, under the Integrated Planning Act 1997 (IPA) for development projects other than mining. Secondly, under the Chapter 3 of the Environmental Protection Act 1994 (Qld) (EP Act) for some mining and petroleum activities. Thirdly, under the State Development and Public Works Organisation Act 1971 (Qld) (State Development Act) for ‘significant projects’. Finally, under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cth) for ‘controlled actions’.[19]

South Australia (SA)

The local governing tool for EIA in South Australia is the Development Act 1993 (SA). There are three levels of assessment possible under the Act in the form of an environment impact statement (EIS), a public environmental report (PER) or a Development Report (DR).[16]

Tasmania (TAS)

In Tasmania, an integrated system of legislation is used to govern development and approval process, this system is a mixture of the Environmental Management and Pollution Control Act 1994 (Tas) (EMPC Act), Land Use Planning and Approvals Act 1993 (Tas) (LUPA Act), State Policies and Projects Act 1993 (Tas) (SPPA), and Resource Management and Planning Appeals Tribunal Act 1993 (Tas).[16]

Victoria (VIC)

The EIA process in Victoria is intertwined with the Environment Effects Act 1978 (Vic) and the Ministerial Guidelines for Assessment of Environmental Effects (made under the s 10 of the EE Act).[20]

Western Australia (WA)

Part 4 of the Environmental Protection Act 1986 (WA) provides the legislative framework for the EIA process in Western Australia.[21] The EPA Act oversees the planning and development proposals and assesses their likely impacts on the environment.[citation needed]

Canada

In Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transportation),(SCC 1992) La Forest J of the Supreme Court of Canada described environmental impact assessment in terms of the proper scope of federal jurisdiction with respect to environments matters,

"Environmental impact assessment is, in its simplest form, a planning tool that is now generally regarded as an integral component of sound decision-making."[22]

Supreme Court Justice La Forest cited (Cotton & Emond 1981, p. 245), "The basic concepts behind environmental assessment are simply stated: (1) early identification and evaluation of all potential environmental consequences of a proposed undertaking; (2) decision making that both guarantees the adequacy of this process and reconciles, to the greatest extent possible, the proponent’s development desires with environmental protection and preservation."[23]

La Forest referred to (Jeffery 1989, 1.2,1.4) and (Emond 1978, p. 5) who described "...environmental assessments as a planning tool with both an information-gathering and a decision-making component" that provide "...an objective basis for granting or denying approval for a proposed development."[24][25]

Justice La Forest addressed his concerns about the implications of Bill C-45 regarding public navigation rights on lakes and rivers that would contradict previous cases.(La Forest 1973, pp. 178–80)[26]

The Canadian Environmental Assessment Act 2012 (CEAA 2012)[27] "and its regulations establish the legislative basis for the federal practice of environmental assessment in most regions of Canada."[28][29][30] CEAA 2012 came into force July 6, 2012 and replaces the former Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (1995). EA is defined as a planning tool to identify, understand, assess and mitigate, where possible, the environmental effects of a project.

"The purposes of this Act are: (a) to protect the components of the environment that are within the legislative authority of Parliament from significant adverse environmental effects caused by a designated project; (b) to ensure that designated projects that require the exercise of a power or performance of a duty or function by a federal authority under any Act of Parliament other than this Act to be carried out, are considered in a careful and precautionary manner to avoid significant adverse environmental effects; (c) to promote cooperation and coordinated action between federal and provincial governments with respect to environmental assessments; (d) to promote communication and cooperation with aboriginal peoples with respect to environmental assessments; (e) to ensure that opportunities are provided for meaningful public participation during an environmental assessment; (f) to ensure that an environmental assessment is completed in a timely manner; (g) to ensure that projects, as defined in section 66, that are to be carried out on federal lands, or those that are outside Canada and that are to be carried out or financially supported by a federal authority, are considered in a careful and precautionary manner to avoid significant adverse environmental effects; (h) to encourage federal authorities to take actions that promote sustainable development in order to achieve or maintain a healthy environment and a healthy economy; and (i) to encourage the study of the cumulative effects of physical activities in a region and the consideration of those study results in environmental assessments."[31]

Canadian Environmental Assessment Act

Opposition

Environmental Lawyer Dianne Saxe argued that the CEAA 2012 "allows the federal government to create mandatory timelines for assessments of even the largest and most important projects, regardless of public opposition."[32]

"Now that federal environmental assessments are gone, the federal government will only assess very large, very important projects. But it’s going to do them in a hurry."

Dianne Saxe[32]

On 3 August 2012 the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency designated nine projects:

  • Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline Joint Review Panel (JRP) 18 months;
  • Marathon Platinum Group Metals and Copper Mine Project (JRP):[33] 13 months;
  • Site C Clean Energy Project (JRP) 8.5 months; Deep Geologic Repository Project (JRP) 17 months;
  • Enbridge Northern Gateway Project (JRP) 18 months;
  • Jackpine Mine Expansion Project (JRP) 11.5 months;
  • Pierre River Mine Project:[34] 8 months;
  • New Prosperity Gold-Copper Mine Project (JRP) 7.5 months;
  • Frontier Oil Sands Mine Project (JRP)[35][36] 8.5 months;
  • EnCana/Cenovus Shallow Gas Infill Project (JRP) 5 months.[37]

Saxe compares these timelines with environmental assessments for the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline. Thomas R. Berger, Royal Commissioner of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry (9 May 1977), worked extremely hard to ensure that industrial development on Aboriginal people's land resulted in benefits to those indigenous people.[38]

On 22 April 2013, NDP MP Megan Leslie issued a statement claiming that the Harper government's recent changes to "fish habitat protection, the Navigable Waters Protection Act and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act", along with gutting existing laws and making cuts to science and research, "will be disastrous, not only for the environment but also for Canadians’ health and economic prosperity."[39] On 26 September 2012, Leslie argued that with the changes to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act that came into effect 6 July 2012, "seismic testing, dams, wind farms and power plants" no longer required any federal environmental assessment. She also claimed that because the CEAA 2012—which she claimed was rushed through Parliament—dismantled the CEAA 1995, the Oshawa ethanol plant project would no longer have a full federal environmental assessment.[40] Mr. Peter Kent (Minister of the Environment) explained that the CEAA 2012 "provides for the Government of Canada and the Environmental Assessment Agency to focus on the large and most significant projects that are being proposed across the country." The 2,000 to 3,000-plus smaller screenings that were in effect under CEAA 1995 became the "responsibility of lower levels of government but are still subject to the same strict federal environmental laws."[40] Anne Minh-Thu Quach, MP for Beauharnois—Salaberry, QC, argued that the mammoth budget bill dismantled 50 years of environmental protection without consulting Canadians about the "colossal changes they are making to environmental assessments." She claimed that the federal government is entering into "limited consultations, by invitation only, months after the damage was done."[40]

China

The Environmental Impact Assessment Law (EIA Law) requires that an environmental impact assessment be completed prior to project construction. However, if a developer completely ignores this requirement and builds a project without submitting an environmental impact statement, the only penalty is that the environmental protection bureau (EPB) may require the developer to do a make-up environmental assessment. If the developer does not complete this make-up assessment within the designated time, only then is the EPB authorized to fine the developer. Even so, the possible fine is capped at a maximum of about US$25,000, a fraction of the overall cost of most major projects. The lack of more stringent enforcement mechanisms has resulted in a significant percentage of projects not completing legally required environmental impact assessments prior to construction.[41]

China's State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) used the legislation to halt 30 projects in 2004, including three hydro-power plants under the Three Gorges Project Company. Although one month later (Note as a point of reference, that the typical EIA for a major project in the USA takes one to two years.), most of the 30 halted projects resumed their construction, reportedly having passed the environmental assessment, the fact that these key projects' construction was ever suspended was notable.[citation needed]

A joint investigation by SEPA and the Ministry of Land and Resources in 2004 showed that 30–40% of the mining construction projects went through the procedure of environment impact assessment as required, while in some areas only 6–7% did so. This partly explains why China has witnessed so many mining accidents in recent years.[citation needed]

SEPA alone cannot guarantee the full enforcement of environmental laws and regulations, observed Professor Wang Canfa, director of the centre to help environmental victims at China University of Political Science and Law. In fact, according to Wang, the rate of China's environmental laws and regulations that are actually enforced is estimated at barely 10%.[42]

Egypt

Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) EIA is implemented in Egypt under the umbrella of the Ministry of state for environmental affairs. The Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) is responsible for the EIA services.[43]

In June 1997, the responsibility of Egypt's first full-time Minister of State for Environmental Affairs was assigned as stated in the Presidential Decree no.275/1997. From thereon, the new ministry has focused, in close collaboration with the national and international development partners, on defining environmental policies, setting priorities and implementing initiatives within a context of sustainable development.[44]

According to the Law 4/1994 for the Protection of the Environment, the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) was restructured with the new mandate to substitute the institution initially established in 1982. At the central level, EEAA represents the executive arm of the Ministry.[45]

The purpose of EIA is to ensure the protection and conservation of the environment and natural resources including human health aspects against uncontrolled development. The long-term objective is to ensure a sustainable economic development that meets present needs without compromising future generations ability to meet their own needs. EIA is an important tool in the integrated environmental management approach.[46]

EIA must be performed for new establishments or projects and for expansions or renovations of existing establishments according to the Law for the Environment.[47]

EU

A wide range of instruments exist in the Environmental policy of the European Union. Among them the European Union has established a mix of mandatory and discretionary procedures to assess environmental impacts.[48] Directive (85/337/EEC) on Environmental Impact Assessments (known as the EIA Directive)[49] was first introduced in 1985, amended in 1997, amended again in 2003 following EU signature of the 1998 Aarhus Convention, and once more in 2009.[50]

The initial Directive of 1985 and its three amendments have been codified in Directive 2011/92/EU of 13 December 2011.[51]

In 2001, the issue was enlarged to include the assessment of plans and programmes by the so-called Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) Directive (2001/42/EC), which was amended by Directive 2014/52/EU of 16 April 2014.[52][48] Under the EU directive, a compliant EIA must provide certain information in seven key areas:[53]

  1. Description of the project
    • Description of actual project and site description
    • Break the project down into its key components, i.e. construction, operations, decommissioning
    • For each component list all of the sources of environmental disturbance
    • For each component all the inputs and outputs must be listed, e.g., air pollution, noise, hydrology
  2. Alternatives that have been considered
    • Examine alternatives that have been considered
    • Example: in a biomass power station, will the fuel be sourced locally or nationally?
  3. Description of the environment
    • List of all aspects of the environment that may be affected by the development
    • Example: populations, fauna, flora, air, soil, water, humans, landscape, cultural heritage
    • This section is best carried out with the help of local experts, e.g. the RSPB in the UK
  4. Description of the significant effects on the environment
    • The word significant is crucial here as the definition can vary
    • 'Significant' must be defined
    • The most frequent method used here is use of the Leopold matrix
    • The matrix is a tool used in the systematic examination of potential interactions
    • Example: in a windfarm development a significant impact may be collisions with birds
  5. Mitigation
    • This is where EIA is most useful
    • Once section 4 is complete, it is obvious where impacts are greatest
    • Using this information in ways to avoid negative impacts should be developed
    • Best working with the developer with this section as they know the project best
    • Using the windfarm example again, construction might take place outside of bird nesting seasons, or removal of hardstanding on a potentially contaminated land site might take place outside of the rainy season.
  6. Non-technical summary (EIS)
    • The EIA is in the public domain and be used in the decision-making process
    • It is important that the information is available to the public
    • This section is a summary that does not include jargon or complicated diagrams
    • It should be understood by the informed lay-person
  7. Lack of know-how/technical difficulties
    • This section is to advise any areas of weakness in knowledge
    • It can be used to focus areas of future research
    • Some developers see the EIA as a starting block for poor environmental management

In 2021, ESG reporting requirements changed in the EU and UK. The EU started enforcing the Sustainable Finance Disclosures Regulation (SFDR), which was created with the purpose of unifying climate risk disclosures across the private sector by 2023. It also requires businesses to report on "principal adverse impacts" for society and the environment.[54]

Annexed projects

All projects are either classified as Annex 1 or Annex 2 projects. Those lying in Annex 1 are large scale developments such as motorways, chemical works, bridges, power stations, etc. These always require an EIA under the Environmental Impact Assessment Directive (85,337,EEC as amended). Annex 2 projects are smaller in scale than those referred to in Annex 1. Member States must determine whether these project shall be made subject to an assessment subject to a set of criteria set out in Annex 3 of codified Directive 2011/92/EU.[citation needed]

The Netherlands

EIA was implemented in Dutch legislation on September 1, 1987. The categories of projects which require an EIA are summarised in Dutch legislation, the Wet milieubeheer. The use of thresholds for activities makes sure that EIA is obligatory for those activities that may have considerable impacts on the environment.[citation needed]

For projects and plans which fit these criteria, an EIA report is required. The EIA report defines a.o. the proposed initiative, it makes clear the impact of that initiative on the environment and compares this with the impact of possible alternatives with less a negative impact.[55]

United Kingdom

The EU Directives concerning environmental impact assessment are implemented in England through the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2017, which also apply to projects serving national defence purposes in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.[56]

Hong Kong

EIA in Hong Kong is regulated by the Environmental Impact Assessment Ordinance 1997, which became effective in 1998.[citation needed]

The original proposal to construct the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line overground across the Long Valley failed to get through EIA, and the Kowloon–Canton Railway Corporation had to change its plan and build the railway underground. In April 2011, the EIA of the Hong Kong section of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge was found to have breached the ordinance, and was declared unlawful. The appeal by the government was allowed in September 2011. However, it was estimated that this EIA court case had increased the construction cost of the Hong Kong section of the bridge by HK$6.5 billion in money-of-the-day prices.[57]

Iraq

The Ministry of Environment of the federal government of Iraq is in charge of issuing Environmental compliance certificates based on an EIA report prepared by professional consultant and thoroughly reviewed by MOE. Any project or activity prior to its establishment or even already existing project has to be approved and obtain such certificate from the MOE. Projects are classified into 3 categories; “A”, “B” and “C”. EIA report is usually obligatory for those projects and activities falling under categories “A” (large-scale) and “B” (small-scale) that may have considerable impacts on environment.[58] An example of “A” category activities such as: dams and reservoirs, forestry production projects, industrial plants, irrigation, drainage and flood control, land clearance and leveling, port and harbor development, river basin development, thermal power and hydro-power development, manufacture, transportation and use of pesticides or other hazardous materials, hazardous waste management and disposal....etc. An example of “B” category activities such as: agro-industries, electrical transmission, renewable energy, rural electrification, tourism, rehabilitation or maintenance of highway or rural roads, rehabilitation or modification of existing industrial facilities...etc. preparation of EIA report is usually exempt for projects falling under category “C” that may have low to no impact on environment, and example of “C” category activities: small fish breeding pond, institutional development, most human resources projects...etc.[citation needed]

The main environmental legislations in Iraq are: Law No.64 for cities and land use (1965), Law No.21 for noise prevention (1966), Law No.25 for system of rivers and other water resources protection (1967), Law No.99 for ionized radiation (1980), Law No.89 for public health (drinking water provision, sanitation and environmental monitoring (1981), Law No.79 for protection and improvement of environment (1986), Environmental criteria for agricultural, industrial and public service projects (1990), Law No.3 for protection and improvement of environment (1997), Law No.2 for water systems protection (2001), Law No.44 for creation of Ministry of Environment instead of the council of protection and improvement of environment (2003), Law No.27 for environmental protection and improvement (2009),[59] Law No.4 for protection of ambient air system (2012).[citation needed]

Meanwhile, Environmental Protection and Improvement Board in the regional government of Kurdistan in the northern Iraq (Erbil, Duhok, Sulaimany and Garmyan) is responsible of issuing Environmental compliance certificate, the board was established according to law No.3 Environmental protection and improvement board in Iraqi Kurdistan Region (2010).[60] The board is responsible of issuing such certificate for all projects and activities except of petroleum operation which EIA process is organized and implemented by the Ministry of Natural Resources of Kurdistan Regional government.[61] The same Iraqi Environmental Legislations mentioned are adopted but the procedure of EIA in Iraqi-Kurdistan region government may differ from the one in the Federal government of Iraq.[citation needed]

India

The Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) of India has been in a great effort in Environmental Impact Assessment in India. The main laws in action are the Water Act(1974), the Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act (1972), the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act (1981) and the Environment (Protection) Act (1986), Biological Diversity Act(2002).[62] The responsible body for this is the Central Pollution Control Board.[citation needed]

Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) studies need a significant amount of primary and secondary environmental data. Primary data are those collected in the field to define the status of the environment (like air quality data, water quality data etc.). Secondary data are those collected over the years that can be used to understand the existing environmental scenario of the study area. The environmental impact assessment (EIA) studies are conducted over a short period of time and therefore the understanding of the environmental trends, based on a few months of primary data, has limitations. Ideally, the primary data must be considered along with the secondary data for complete understanding of the existing environmental status of the area. In many EIA studies, the secondary data needs could be as high as 80% of the total data requirement. EIC is the repository of one-stop secondary data source for environmental impact assessment in India.[citation needed]

The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) experience in India indicates that the lack of timely availability of reliable and authentic environmental data has been a major bottleneck in achieving the full benefits of EIA. The environment being a multi-disciplinary subject, a multitude of agencies are involved in collection of environmental data. However, no single organization in India tracks available data from these agencies and makes it available in one place in a form required by environmental impact assessment practitioners. Further, environmental data is not available in enhanced forms that improve the quality of the EIA. This makes it harder and more time-consuming to generate environmental impact assessments and receive timely environmental clearances from regulators. With this background, the Environmental Information Centre (EIC) has been set up to serve as a professionally managed clearinghouse of environmental information that can be used by MoEF, project proponents, consultants, NGOs and other stakeholders involved in the process of environmental impact assessment in India. EIC caters to the need of creating and disseminating of organized environmental data for various developmental initiatives all over the country.[citation needed]

EIC stores data in GIS format and makes it available to all environmental impact assessment studies and to EIA stakeholders.[citation needed]

In 2020, the Government of India proposed a new EIA 2020 Draft, which was widely criticized for heavily diluting the EIA.[63] Many Environmental groups started a campaign demanding the withdrawal of the Draft, in face of these campaigns, the Government of India resorted to banning/blocking the websites of these groups.[64]

Malaysia

In Malaysia, Section 34A, Environmental Quality Act, 1974[65] requires developments that have significant impact to the environment are required to conduct the Environmental impact assessment.[66][67]

Nepal

In Nepal, EIA has been integrated in major development projects since the early 1980s. In the planning history of Nepal, the sixth plan (1980–85), for the first time, recognized the need for EIA with the establishment of Environmental Impact Study Project (EISP) under the Department of Soil Conservation in 1982 to develop necessary instruments for integration of EIA in infrastructure development projects. However, the government of Nepal enunciated environment conservation-related policies in the seventh plan (NPC, 1985–1990). To enforce this policy and make necessary arrangements, a series of guidelines were developed, thereby incorporating the elements of environmental factors right from the project formulation stage of the development plans and projects and to avoid or minimize adverse effects on the ecological system. In addition, it has also emphasized that EIAs of industry, tourism, water resources, transportation, urbanization, agriculture, forest and other developmental projects be conducted.[citation needed]

In Nepal, the government's Environmental Impact Assessment Guideline of 1993 inspired the enactment of the Environment Protection Act (EPA) of 1997 and the Environment Protection Rules (EPR) of 1997 (EPA and EPR have been enforced since 24 and 26 June 1997 respectively in Nepal) to internalizing the environmental assessment system. The process institutionalized the EIA process in development proposals and enactment, which makes the integration of IEE and EIA legally binding to the prescribed projects. The projects, requiring EIA or IEE, are included in Schedules 1 and 2 of the EPR, 1997 (GoN/MoLJPA 1997).[citation needed]

New Zealand

In New Zealand, EIA is usually referred to as Assessment of Environmental Effects (AEE). The first use of EIA's dates back to a Cabinet minute passed in 1974 called Environmental Protection and Enhancement Procedures. This had no legal force and only related to the activities of government departments. When the Resource Management Act was passed in 1991, an EIA was required as part of a resource consent application. Section 88 of the Act specifies that the AEE must include "such detail as corresponds with the scale and significance of the effects that the activity may have on the environment". While there is no duty to consult any person when making a resource consent application (Sections 36A and Schedule 4), proof of consultation is almost certain required by local councils when they decide whether or not to publicly notify the consent application under Section 93.[68]

Pakistan

The Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency is an executive agency of the Government of Pakistan managed by the Ministry of Climate Change. The agency is charged with protecting human health and the environment by writing and enforcing regulations based on laws passed by Parliament. The Directorate of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or Initial Environmental Examination (IEE) is tasked with implementing the Pakistan Environment Protection Act (PEPA) - 1997, specifically Section 12 and Review of IEE/EIA Regulations 2000. This Directorate comprises two sections namely EIA or Monitoring and Environment Engineering And Technology Transfer. All public and private sector developmental projects that fall under any of the Schedules of Regulations have to obtain environmental approval in respect of their projects. The EIA/Monitoring Section also conducts post-environmental approval monitoring to ascertain the compliance status of the Environment Management Plan (EMP).[69]

Russian Federation

As of 2004, the state authority responsible for conducting the State EIA in Russia has been split between two Federal bodies: 1) Federal service for monitoring the use of natural resources – a part of the Russian Ministry for Natural Resources and Environment and 2) Federal Service for Ecological, Technological and Nuclear Control. The two main pieces of environmental legislation in Russia are the Federal Law 'On Ecological Expertise', 1995 and the 'Regulations on Assessment of Impact from Intended Business and Other Activity on Environment in the Russian Federation', 2000.[70]

Federal Service for monitoring the use of natural resources

In 2006, the parliament committee on ecology in conjunction with the Ministry for Natural Resources and Environment, created a working group to prepare a number of amendments to existing legislation to cover such topics as stringent project documentation for building of potentially environmentally damaging objects as well as building of projects on the territory of protected areas. There has been some success in this area, as evidenced from abandonment of plans to construct a gas pipe-line through the only remaining habitat of the critically endangered Amur leopard in the Russian Far East.[citation needed]

Federal Service for Ecological, Technological and Nuclear Control

The government's decision to hand over control over several important procedures, including state EIA in the field of all types of energy projects, to the Federal Service for Ecological, Technological and Nuclear Control has caused major controversy and elicited criticism from environmental groups, which have blamed the government for giving nuclear power industry control over the state EIA.[citation needed]

The main problem concerning State EIA in Russia is the clear differentiation of jurisdiction between the two above-mentioned Federal bodies.[citation needed]

Sri Lanka

The National Environmental Act, 1998 requires environmental impact assessment for large scale projects in sensitive areas. It is enforced by the Central Environmental Authority.[71]

Ukraine

The new law of Ukraine on evaluation of impact on surroundings prescribes the requirements of environmental safety, rational use of national resources, minimizing of harmful impact on surroundings in the process of making managerial decisions about planned activity. The designing of the conclusion of evaluation of impact is a result of its conducting. The key moment of the law on evaluation of impact on surroundings is a substitution of conclusion of state environmental expertise on the conclusion of evaluation of impact on surroundings. Business entity is forbidden to conduct or to start its planned activity without the conclusion of impact on surroundings.[72]

United States

The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), enacted in 1970, established a policy of environmental impact assessment for federal agency actions, federally funded activities or federally permitted/licensed activities that in the U. S. is termed "environmental review" or simply "the NEPA process."[73] The law also created the Council on Environmental Quality, which promulgated regulations to codify the law's requirements.[74] Under United States environmental law an Environmental Assessment (EA) is compiled to determine the need for an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). Federal or federalized actions expected to subject or be subject to significant environmental impacts will publish a Notice of Intent to Prepare an EIS as soon as significance is known. Certain actions of federal agencies must be preceded by the NEPA process. Contrary to a widespread misconception, NEPA does not prohibit the federal government or its licensees/permittees from harming the environment, nor does it specify any penalty if an environmental impact assessment turns out to be inaccurate, intentionally or otherwise. NEPA requires that plausible statements as to the prospective impacts be disclosed in advance. The purpose of NEPA process is to ensure that the decision maker is fully informed of the environmental aspects and consequences prior to making the final decision.[citation needed]

Environmental assessment

An environmental assessment (EA) is an environmental analysis prepared pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act to determine whether a federal action would significantly affect the environment and thus require a more detailed Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). The certified release of an Environmental Assessment results in either a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) or an EIS.[75]

The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), which oversees the administration of NEPA, issued regulations for implementing the NEPA in 1979. Eccleston reports that the NEPA regulations barely mention preparation of EAs. This is because the EA was originally intended to be a simple document used in relatively rare instances where an agency was not sure if the potential significance of an action would be sufficient to trigger preparation of an EIS. But today, because EISs are so much longer and complicated to prepare, federal agencies are going to great effort to avoid preparing EISs by using EAs, even in cases where the use of EAs may be inappropriate. The ratio of EAs that are being issued compared to EISs is about 100 to 1.[76]

In July 2020, President Donald Trump moved to significantly weaken NEPA. CEQ published a final rule which limits the duration of EAs to 1 year and EISs to 2 years. The rule also exempts a number of projects from review entirely and prevents the consideration of cumulative environmental impacts, including those caused by climate change. The rule went into effect on September 14, 2020 and is the first update to the CEQ regulations since their promulgation in 1978.[77][78]

Content

The Environmental Assessment is a concise public document prepared by the federal action agency that serves to:

  1. briefly provide sufficient evidence and analysis for determining whether to prepare an EIS or a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)
  2. Demonstrate compliance with the act when no EIS is required
  3. facilitate the preparation of an EIS when a FONSI cannot be demonstrated

The Environmental Assessment includes a brief discussion of the purpose and need of the proposal and of its alternatives as required by NEPA 102(2)(E), and of the human environmental impacts resulting from and occurring to the proposed actions and alternatives considered practicable, plus a listing of studies conducted and agencies and stakeholders consulted to reach these conclusions. The action agency must approve an EA before it is made available to the public. The EA is made public through notices of availability by local, state, or regional clearing houses, often triggered by the purchase of a public notice advertisement in a newspaper of general circulation in the proposed activity area.[citation needed]

Structure

The structure of a generic Environmental Assessment is as follows:

  1. Summary
  2. Introduction
    • Background
    • Purpose and Need for Action
    • Proposed Action
    • Decision Framework
    • Public Involvement
    • Issues
  3. Alternatives, including the Proposed Action
    • Alternatives
    • Mitigation Common to All Alternatives
    • Comparison of Alternatives
  4. Environmental Consequences
  5. Consultation and Coordination
Procedure

The EA becomes a draft public document when notice of it is published, usually in a newspaper of general circulation in the area affected by the proposal. There is a 15-day review period required for an Environmental Assessment (30 days if exceptional circumstances) while the document is made available for public commentary, and a similar time for any objection to improper process. Commenting on the Draft EA is typically done in writing or email, submitted to the lead action agency as published in the notice of availability. An EA does not require a public hearing for verbal comments. Following the mandated public comment period, the lead action agency responds to any comments, and certifies either a FONSI or a Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare an EIS in its public environmental review record. The preparation of an EIS then generates a similar but more lengthy, involved and expensive process.[citation needed]

Environmental impact statement

The adequacy of an environmental impact statement (EIS) can be challenged in federal court. Major proposed projects have been blocked because of an agency's failure to prepare an acceptable EIS. One prominent example was the Westway landfill and highway development in and along the Hudson River in New York City.[79] Another prominent case involved the Sierra Club suing the Nevada Department of Transportation over its denial of the club's request to issue a supplemental EIS addressing air emissions of particulate matter and hazardous air pollutants in the case of widening U.S. Route 95 through Las Vegas.[80] The case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which led to construction on the highway being halted until the court's final decision. The case was settled prior to the court's final decision.[citation needed]

Several state governments that have adopted "little NEPAs," state laws imposing EIS requirements for particular state actions. Some of those state laws such as the California Environmental Quality Act refer to the required environmental impact study as an environmental impact report.[81]

This variety of state requirements produces voluminous data not just upon impacts of individual projects, but also in insufficiently researched scientific domains. For example, in a seemingly routine Environmental Impact Report for the city of Monterey, California, information came to light that led to the official federal endangered species listing of Hickman's potentilla, a rare coastal wildflower.[82][83]

Transboundary application

Environmental threats do not respect national borders. International pollution can have detrimental effects on the atmosphere, oceans, rivers, aquifers, farmland, the weather and biodiversity. Global climate change is transnational. Specific pollution threats include acid rain, radioactive contamination, debris in outer space, stratospheric ozone depletion and toxic oil spills. The Chernobyl disaster, precipitated by a nuclear accident on April 26, 1986, is a stark reminder of the devastating effects of transboundary nuclear pollution.[84]

Environmental protection is inherently a cross-border issue and has led to the creation of transnational regulation via multilateral and bilateral treaties. The United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (UNCHE or Stockholm Conference) held in Stockholm in 1972 and the United Nations Conference on the Environment and Development (UNCED or Rio Summit, Rio Conference, or Earth Summit) held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 were key in the creation of about 1,000 international instruments that include at least some provisions related to the environment and its protection.[85]

The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe's Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context (Espoo Convention) was negotiated to provide an international legal framework for transboundary EIA.[86]

However, as there is no universal legislature or administration with a comprehensive mandate, most international treaties exist parallel to one another and are further developed without the benefit of consideration being given to potential conflicts with other agreements. There is also the issue of international enforcement.[87] This has led to duplications and failures, in part due to an inability to enforce agreements. An example is the failure of many international fisheries regimes to restrict harvesting practises.[88]

Criticism

According to Jay et al., EIA is used as a decision-aiding tool rather than decision-making tool. There is growing dissent about them as their influence on decisions is limited. Improved training for practitioners, guidance on bestpractice and continuing research have all been proposed.[89]

EIAs have been criticized for excessively limiting their scope in space and time. No accepted procedure exists for determining such boundaries. The boundary refers to ‘the spatial and temporal boundary of the proposal’s effects’. This boundary is determined by the applicant and the lead assessor, but in practice, almost all EIAs address only direct and immediate on-site effects.[90]

Development causes both direct and indirect effects. Consumption of goods and services, production, use and disposal of building materials and machinery, additional land use for activities of manufacturing and services, mining and refining, etc., all have environmental impacts. The indirect effects of development can be much higher than the direct effects examined by an EIA. Proposals such as airports or shipyards cause wide-ranging national and international effects, which should be covered in EIAs.[91]

Broadening the scope of EIA can benefit the conservation of threatened species. Instead of concentrating on the project site, some EIAs employed a habitat-based approach that focused on much broader relationships among humans and the environment. As a result, alternatives that reduce the negative effects to the population of whole species, rather than local subpopulations, can be assessed.[92]

Thissen and Agusdinata[93] have argued that little attention is given to the systematic identification and assessment of uncertainties in environmental studies which is critical in situations where uncertainty cannot be easily reduced by doing more research. In line with this, Maier et al.[94] have concluded on the need to consider uncertainty at all stages of the decision-making process. In such a way decisions can be made with confidence or known uncertainty. These proposals are justified on data that shows that environmental assessments fail to predict accurately the impacts observed. Tenney et al.[95] and Wood et al.[96] have reported evidence of the intrinsic uncertainty attached to EIAs predictions from a number of case studies worldwide. The gathered evidence consisted of comparisons between predictions in EIAs and the impacts measured during, or following project implementation. In explaining this trend, Tenney et al.[95] have highlighted major causes such as project changes, modelling errors, errors in data and assumptions taken and bias introduced by people in the projects analyzed. Some approaches to deal with uncertainty in EIA have been reviewed in.[97]

There has also been criticism on the EIAs in the United States not addressing environmental justice concerns sufficiently. Yakuba writes "However, environmental history provides evidence that political process and special interests govern the attainment of the EJ goal by way of inadequate adherence to the NEPA provisions. Public participation (PP) is a principal requirement for achieving environmental justice and constitutes a pivotal determinant of EIA outcome."[98]

Most recent analyses indicated that the persistent problem may have its roots in socio-cultural settings, and environment-nurturing cultural value should be regarded as one among major progressive cultures, and its implementation will need to engage the corporate sector.[99]

See also

---

References

  1. ^ MacKinnon, A. J., Duinker, P. N., Walker, T. R. (2018). The Application of Science in Environmental Impact Assessment. Routledge.
  2. ^ Eccleston, Charles H. (2011). Environmental Impact Assessment: A Guide to Best Professional Practices. Chapter 5. ISBN 978-1439828731
  3. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 227.
  4. ^ (PDF). International Association for Impact Assessment. 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 5, 2012. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  5. ^ Holder, J., (2004), Environmental Assessment: The Regulation of Decision Making, Oxford University Press, New York; For a comparative discussion of the elements of various domestic EIA systems, see Christopher Wood Environmental Impact Assessment: A Comparative Review (2 ed, Prentice Hall, Harlow, 2002).
  6. ^ See, for example, Environmental movement in the United States.
  7. ^ Clark & Canter 1997, p. 199.
  8. ^ Rychlak & Case 2010, p. 111-120.
  9. ^ Kershner 2011.
  10. ^ Daniel, Stavros E; Tsoulfas, Giannis T; Pappis, Costas P; Rachaniotis, Nikos P (2004). "Aggregating and evaluating the results of different Environmental Impact Assessment methods". Ecological Indicators. 4 (2): 125–138. doi:10.1016/j.ecolind.2004.01.003.
  11. ^ Hitzschky, K.; Silviera, J. (2009). "A proposed impact assessment method for genetically modified plants (As-GMP method)". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. 29 (6): 348–368. doi:10.1016/j.eiar.2009.02.006.
  12. ^ Peche, R., & Rodriguez, E., (2009) Environmental impact Assessment procedure: A new approach based on Fuzzy logic Environmental Impact Assessment review 29:275–283
  13. ^ Duarte O. (2000) Técnicas Difusas en la Evaluación de Impacto Ambiental. Ph.D. Thesis, Universidad de Granada
  14. ^ ARAI Research Group, Granada, Spain. "Environmental Impact Assessment at University of Granada." 2014-10-25 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Wilson, L., (1998), A Practical Method for Environmental Impact Assessment Audits Environ Impact Assess Rev 18: 59–71
  16. ^ a b c d e f Elliott, M. & Thomas, I. (2009), "Environment Impact Assessment in Australia: Theory and Practice, 5th Edn, Federation Press, Sydney"
  17. ^ a b c d e f The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, Australia: The Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, from the original on 7 October 2013, retrieved 9 September 2010
  18. ^ The Northern Territory Government, viewed 10 September 2010,
  19. ^ a b The Environment Defenders, viewed 10 September 2010, EDO factsheet 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ The Law Handbook, viewed 9 September 2010,
  21. ^ The Government of Western Australia, viewed 9 September 2010,
  22. ^ SCC 1992.
  23. ^ Cotton, Roger; Emond, D. Paul (1981). John Swaigen (ed.). Environmental Impact Assessment. Environmental Rights in Canada. Toronto, Ontario: Butterworths.
  24. ^ Jeffery, Michael I. (1989). Environmental Approvals in Canada. Toronto, Ontario: Butterworths.
  25. ^ Emond, D. P. (1978). Environmental Assessment Law in Canada. Toronto, Ontario: Emond‑Montgomery Ltd. ISBN 9780920722008.
  26. ^ La Forest, Gérard V. (1973). Water Law in Canada. Ottawa: Information Canada.
  27. ^ {{{year}}} SCC {{{num}}} (18 July 2012)
  28. ^ 2012 SCC {{{num}}}
  29. ^ {{{year}}} SCC {{{num}}}
  30. ^ CEAA (2012). "What is the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012?". Basics of Environmental Assessment. Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency.
  31. ^ CEAA 2012.
  32. ^ a b Saxe, Dianne (9 August 2012). "Federal environmental assessments will be rushed". Environmental Law and Litigation. from the original on 24 November 2012.
  33. ^ Agency, Canadian Environmental Assessment (19 July 2010). "Marathon Platinum Group Metals and Copper Mine Project". www.ceaa.gc.ca.
  34. ^ Agency, Canadian Environmental Assessment (13 December 2010). "Pierre River Mine Project". www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca.
  35. ^ Agency, Canadian Environmental Assessment (19 January 2012). "Frontier Oil Sands Mine Project". www.ceaa.gc.ca.
  36. ^ Alberta, Government of. "Frontier Oil Sands Mine". majorprojects.alberta.ca. from the original on 2017-03-08.
  37. ^ Saxe 2012.
  38. ^ Host:Allan McFee (9 May 1977). "The Berger Report is released". As It Happens. Toronto. CBC Radio. CBC Radio 1. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. transcript. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  39. ^ "Statement by Official Opposition Environment critic Megan Leslie on Earth Day". NDP. 22 April 2013. from the original on 21 June 2017.
  40. ^ a b c Megan Leslie ({{{year}}}). Question period
  41. ^ Wang, Alex (2007-02-05). "Environmental protection in China: the role of law". from the original on 2012-05-16.
  42. ^ Gu, Lin (2005-09-29). "China Improves Enforcement of Environmental Laws". China Features. from the original on 2007-02-04.
  43. ^ "Ministry of Environment - EEAA > Services > EIA". www.eeaa.gov.eg. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  44. ^ "Ministry of Environment - EEAA > Services > EIA". www.eeaa.gov.eg. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  45. ^ "Ministry of Environment - EEAA > Services > EIA". www.eeaa.gov.eg. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  46. ^ "Ministry of Environment - EEAA > Services > EIA". www.eeaa.gov.eg. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  47. ^ "About MSEA". EEAA. from the original on 2013-01-01. Retrieved 2013-01-03.
  48. ^ a b Watson, Michael (November 13–15, 2003). "Environmental Impact Assessment and European Community Law". XIV International Conference "Danube-River of Cooperation". Archived from the original on March 28, 2007.
  49. ^ "EUR-Lex - 31985L0337 – EN". eur-lex.europa.eu.
  50. ^ "Environmental Impact Assessment - EIA - Environment - European Commission". ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2022-06-15.
  51. ^ DIRECTIVE 2011/92/EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 13 December 2011 on the assessment of the effects of some public and private projects on the environment from Eur-Lex 2017-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
  52. ^ Directive 2014/52/EU amending Directive 2011/92/EU on the assessment of the effects of certain public and private projects on the environment, 16 April 2014
  53. ^ "EUR-Lex – 32001L0042 – EN". eur-lex.europa.eu.
  54. ^ "Survey: 9 in 10 investors do not trust corporate ESG claims". edie.net. Retrieved 2021-08-18.
  55. ^ List of criteria for EIA/SEA 2011-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
  56. ^ UK Government, Environmental Impact Assessment, updated 15 March 2019, accessed 22 October 2019
  57. ^ "LCQ1: Judicial review case regarding the Environmental Impact Assessment reports of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge". Press Releases. www.info.gov.hk. October 26, 2011. from the original on January 19, 2012. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
  58. ^ "EIA process in Iraq" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-08-31.
  59. ^ "Law No.27 of 2009 for protection and improvement of environment" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-09-01.
  60. ^ "Environmental Legislation guides in Kurdistan Region-Iraq" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-01-10.
  61. ^ "INSTRUCTIONS (NO. 1) OF 2013 ON THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT OF PETROLEUM OPERATIONS" (PDF).
  62. ^ Shibani Ghosh, "Demystifying the Environmental Clearance Process in India" 2015-02-21 at the Wayback Machine, NUJS LAW REVIEW, January 2, 2015
  63. ^ "Why EIA 2020 is a sure-shot recipe for more environmental disasters". Money Control. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  64. ^ "Environmental Websites Leading The Movement Against India's Controversial New Proposal Are Blocked". Vice India. Vice. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  65. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-02-15.
  66. ^ "Environmental laws in malaysia - Environmental Laws in Malaysia: Time to Walk the Walk Azmi Sharom*". StuDocu (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  67. ^ LAWS OF MALAYSIA ACT A636 ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY (AMENDMENT) ACT 1985
  68. ^ "Assessing the Application and Assessment of Environmental Effects | Quality Planning". www.qualityplanning.org.nz. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  69. ^ "DIRECTORATE OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT / MONITORING". Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  70. ^ Department of Environmental Protection, Russia
  71. ^ Central Environmental Authority. "Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Procedure in Sri Lanka". Central Environmental Authority. Central Environmental Authority. from the original on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  72. ^ MCL LLC. "Evaluation of impact on surroundings". MCL LLC. Eric Firado. from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  73. ^ United States. National Environmental Policy Act, P.L. 91-190 2013-05-16 at the Wayback Machine, 83 Stat. 852, 42 U.S.C. § 4321 et seq. Approved January 1, 1970.
  74. ^ U.S. Council on Environmental Quality. "NEPA and Agency Planning." Code of Federal Regulations, 40 CFR 1501.
  75. ^ Eccleston, Charles H. and J. Peyton Doub (2010). Preparing NEPA Environmental Assessments: A User’s Guide to Best Professional Practices. ISBN 978-1439808825.
  76. ^ Eccleston, Charles; Doub, J. Peyton (2012). Preparing NEPA Environmental Assessments: A User's Guide to Best Professional Practices. CRC Press. ISBN 9781439808825.
  77. ^ CEQ (2020-07-16). "Update to the Regulations Implementing the Procedural Provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act; Final rule." Federal Register, 85 FR 43304
  78. ^ Friedman, Lisa (2020-07-15). "Trump Weakens Major Conservation Law to Speed Construction Permits". The New York Times.
  79. ^ Sierra Club v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, 2004-03-28 at the Wayback Machine 701 F.2d 1011, 18 ERC 1748. (2d Cir., 02/25/1983)
  80. ^ Ritter, John (2003-06-03). "Lawsuit pits risks and roads". USA Today. from the original on 2011-06-29.
  81. ^ "Sive, D. & Chertok, M., "Little NEPAs" and Environmental Impact Assessment Procedures" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2012-10-04. Retrieved 2013-01-03.
  82. ^ C.M. Hogan, G. Deghi, M. Papineau et al., Environmental Impact Report for the Pebble Beach Properties project by Del Monte Forest, Earth Metrics Inc. Prepared for the city of Monterey and State of California Clearinghouse (1992)
  83. ^ U.S. Federal Register: August 2, 1995 (Volume 60, Number 148, Pages 39326-39337)
  84. ^ Sands, P., (1989), The Environment, Community and International Law, Harvard International Law Lournal, 393, p402
  85. ^ Weiss, E., (1999), Understanding Compliance with International Environmental Agreements: The Bakers Dozen Myths, Univ Richmond L.R. 32, 1555
  86. ^ "Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context (Espoo, 1991)". Unece.org. from the original on 2013-01-26. Retrieved 2013-01-03.
  87. ^ Wolfrum, R., & Matz, N., (2003), Conflicts in International Environmental Law, Max-Planck-Institut für Ausländisches Öffentliches Recht und Völkerrech
  88. ^ Young, O., (1999), The Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes, MIT Press
  89. ^ Jay, S.; Jones, C.; Slinn, P.; Wood, C. (2007). "Environmental Impact Assessment: Retrospect and Prospect". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. Elsevier. 27 (4): 289–300. doi:10.1016/j.eiar.2006.12.001.
  90. ^ Lenzen, M.; Murray, S.; Korte, B.; Dey, C. (2003). "Environmental impact assessment including indirect effects—a case study using input-output analysis". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. Elsevier. 23 (3): 263–282. doi:10.1016/S0195-9255(02)00104-X.
  91. ^ Shepherd, A.; Ortolano, L. (1996). "Strategic environmental assessment for sustainable urban development". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. Elsevier. 16 (4–6): 321–335. doi:10.1016/S0195-9255(96)00071-6.
  92. ^ Fernandes, João P. (2000). "EIA procedure, Landscape ecology and conservation management—Evaluation of alternatives in a highway EIA process". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. Elsevier. 20 (6): 665–680. doi:10.1016/S0195-9255(00)00060-3.
  93. ^ Thissen, WIH; Agusdinata, DB (2008). "Handling deep uncertainties in impact assessment". In Proceedings of the 28th Annual Conference of the IAIA May 5–9, 2008, Perth, Australia. IAIA.
  94. ^ Maier, HR; Ascough, JC; Wattenbach, M; Renschler, CS; Labiosa, WB (2008). "Uncertainty in Environmental Decision Making: Issues, Challenges and Future Directions". Publications from USDA-ARS/UNL Faculty. Paper 399. USDA-ARS/UNL Faculty.
  95. ^ a b Tenney, A; Kværner, J; Gjerstad, KI (2006). "Uncertainty in environmental impact assessment predictions: the need for better communication and more transparency". Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal. 24 (1): 45–56. doi:10.3152/147154606781765345.
  96. ^ Wood, C; Dipper, B; Jones, C (2000). "Auditing the assessments of the environmental impacts of planning projects". Journal of Environmental Planning and Management. 43 (1): 23–47. doi:10.1080/09640560010757. S2CID 134202298.
  97. ^ Cardenas, IC; Halman, JIM (2016). "Coping with uncertainty in environmental impact assessments: Open techniques". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. 60: 24–39. doi:10.1016/j.eiar.2016.02.006.
  98. ^ Yakuba, O. (2018). Delivering Environmental Justice through Environmental Impact Assessment in the United States: The Challenge of Public Participation. MDPI.
  99. ^ Vuong, Q.-H. (2021). "The semiconducting principle of monetary and environmental values exchange". Economics and Business Letters. 10 (3): 284–290. doi:10.17811/ebl.10.3.2021.284-290. S2CID 239719169.

Sources

  • Clark, Ray; Canter, Larry, eds. (1997). Environmental Policy and NEPA: Past, Present and Future. Boca Raton, Florida: St. Lucie Press.
  • Rychlak, Ronald J.; Case, David W. (2010). Environmental Law: Oceana's Legal Almanac Series. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 111–120.
  • Kershner, Jim (27 August 2011). "NEPA, the National Environmental Policy Act".
  • Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), 1992 CanLII 110, [1992] 1 SCR 3 (23 January 1992), Supreme Court of Canada (Canada)

Notes

Further reading

  • Carroll, B. and Turpin T. (2009). Environmental impact assessment handbook, 2nd ed. Thomas Telford Ltd, ISBN 978-0-7277-3509-6
  • Fischer, T. B. (ed., 2016). Environmental Assessment. Critical Concepts of the Built Environment, Routledge, New York. ISBN 978-1-138-77776-7
  • Glasson, J; Therivel, R; Chadwick A. (2005). Introduction to Environmental Impact Assessment. London: Routledge
  • Hanna, K. (2009). Environmental Impact Assessment: Practice and Participation, 2nd ed. Oxford
  • Petts, J. (ed.), Handbook of Environmental Impact Assessment, Vols 1 & 2. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. ISBN 0-632-04772-0
  • Ruddy, T. F.; Hilty, L. M. (2008). "Impact assessment and policy learning in the European Commission". Environmental Impact Assessment Review. 28 (2–3): 90. doi:10.1016/j.eiar.2007.05.001.

External links

  • European Commission - EIA website
  • Environmental Impact Assessment at the University of Sydney
  • International Association for Impact Assessment (IAIA)
  • Netherlands Commission for Environmental Assessment
  • ELM EIA Law Matrix ~ Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide

environmental, impact, assessment, this, article, uses, abbreviations, that, confusing, ambiguous, there, might, discussion, about, this, talk, page, please, improve, this, article, october, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, environmental, im. This article uses abbreviations that may be confusing or ambiguous There might be a discussion about this on the talk page Please improve this article if you can October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Environmental Impact assessment EIA is the assessment of the environmental consequences of a plan policy program or actual projects prior to the decision to move forward with the proposed action In this context the term environmental impact assessment is usually used when applied to actual projects by individuals or companies and the term strategic environmental assessment SEA applies to policies plans and programmes most often proposed by organs of state 1 2 It is a tool of environmental management forming a part of project approval and decision making 3 Environmental assessments may be governed by rules of administrative procedure regarding public participation and documentation of decision making and may be subject to judicial review The purpose of the assessment is to ensure that decision makers consider the environmental impacts when deciding whether or not to proceed with a project The International Association for Impact Assessment IAIA defines an environmental impact assessment as the process of identifying predicting evaluating and mitigating the biophysical social and other relevant effects of development proposals prior to major decisions being taken and commitments made 4 EIAs are unique in that they do not require adherence to a predetermined environmental outcome but rather they require decision makers to account for environmental values in their decisions and to justify those decisions in light of detailed environmental studies and public comments on the potential environmental impacts 5 Contents 1 History 2 Methods 3 Follow up 4 Around the world 4 1 Australia 4 1 1 The Commonwealth Level 4 1 2 The State and Territory Level 4 1 2 1 Australian Capital Territory ACT 4 1 2 2 New South Wales NSW 4 1 2 3 Northern Territory NT 4 1 2 4 Queensland QLD 4 1 2 5 Tasmania TAS 4 1 2 6 Victoria VIC 4 1 2 7 Western Australia WA 4 2 Canada 4 2 1 Opposition 4 3 China 4 4 Egypt 4 5 EU 4 5 1 Annexed projects 4 5 2 The Netherlands 4 5 3 United Kingdom 4 6 Hong Kong 4 7 Iraq 4 8 India 4 9 Malaysia 4 10 Nepal 4 11 New Zealand 4 12 Pakistan 4 13 Russian Federation 4 14 Sri Lanka 4 15 Ukraine 4 16 United States 4 16 1 Environmental assessment 4 16 1 1 Content 4 16 1 2 Structure 4 16 1 3 Procedure 4 16 2 Environmental impact statement 5 Transboundary application 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditEnvironmental Impact Assessments commenced in the 1960s as part of increasing environmental awareness 6 An EIA is prepared to estimate the effects of a proposed development or construction project EIA provides technical evaluations that are intended to contribute to more objective decision making In the United States EIA obtained formal status in 1969 with the enactment of the National Environmental Policy Act NEPA EIAs have been used increasingly around the world The number of environmental assessments filed every year has vastly overtaken the number of more rigorous Environmental Impact Statements EIS 7 An environmental assessment is a mini Environmental Impact Statement EIS designed to provide sufficient information to allow the agency to decide whether the preparation of a full blown Environmental Impact Statement EIS is necessary 8 9 Methods EditGeneral and industry specific assessment methods are available including Industrial products Product environmental life cycle analysis LCA is used for identifying and measuring the impact of industrial products on the environment These EIAs consider activities related to extraction of raw materials ancillary materials equipment production use disposal and ancillary equipment 10 Genetically modified plants Specific methods available to perform EIAs of genetically modified organisms include GMP RAM and INOVA 11 Fuzzy logic EIA methods need measurement data to estimate values of impact indicators However many of the environment impacts cannot be quantified e g landscape quality lifestyle quality and social acceptance Instead information from similar EIAs expert judgment and community sentiment are employed Approximate reasoning methods known as fuzzy logic can be used 12 A fuzzy arithmetic approach has also been proposed 13 and implemented using a software tool TDEIA 14 Follow up EditAt the end of the project an audit evaluates the accuracy of the EIA by comparing actual to predicted impacts The objective is to make future EIAs more valid and effective Two primary considerations are Scientific to examine the accuracy of predictions and explain errors citation needed Management to assess the success of mitigation in reducing impacts citation needed Audits can be performed either as a rigorous assessment of the null hypothesis or with a simpler approach comparing what actually occurred against the predictions in the EIA document 15 After an EIA the precautionary and polluter pays principles may be applied to decide whether to reject modify or require strict liability or insurance coverage to a project based on predicted harms citation needed The Hydropower Sustainability Assessment Protocol is a sector specific method for checking the quality of Environmental and Social assessments and management plans citation needed Around the world EditAustralia Edit The history of EIA in Australia could be linked to the enactment of the U S National Environment Policy Act NEPA in 1970 which made the preparation of environmental impact statements a requirement In Australia one might say that the EIA procedures were introduced at a State Level prior to that of the Commonwealth Federal with a majority of the states having divergent views to the Commonwealth One of the pioneering states was New South Wales whose State Pollution Control Commission issued EIA guidelines in 1974 At a Commonwealth i e Federal level this was followed by passing of the Environment Protection Impact of Proposals Act 1974 Cth in 1974 The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 Cth EPBC Act superseded the Environment Protection Impact of Proposals Act 1974 Cth and is the current central piece for EIA in Australia on a Commonwealth i e Federal level An important point to note is that this federal legislation does not override the validity of the States or Territories environmental and development assessments and approvals rather the EPBC Act runs as a parallel to the State Territory Systems 16 Overlap between federal and state requirements is addressed via bilateral agreements or one off accreditation of state processes as provided for in the EPBC Act citation needed The Commonwealth Level Edit The EPBC Act provides a legal framework to protect and manage nationally and internationally important flora fauna ecological communities and heritage places It defines this as matters of national environmental significance The following are the nine matters of such significance 17 World Heritage properties National Heritage places Wetlands of international importance listed under the Ramsar Convention Listed threatened species and ecological communities Migratory species protected under international agreements Commonwealth marine areas the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Nuclear actions including uranium mining and Water resources in relation with coal seam gas development and large coal mining development In addition to this the EPBC Act aims at providing a streamlined national assessment and approval process for activities These activities could be by the Commonwealth or its agents anywhere in the world or activities on Commonwealth land and activities that are listed as having a significant impact on matters of national environment significance 17 The EPBC Act comes into play when a person a proponent wants an action often called a proposal or a project assessed for environmental impacts under the EPBC Act he or she must refer the project to the Department of the Environment and Energy Commonwealth This referral is then released to the public and the relevant state territory and Commonwealth ministers for comment on whether the project is likely to have a significant impact on matters of national environmental significance 17 The Department of the Environment and Energy assess the process and makes recommendation to the minister or the delegate for the feasibility The final discretion on the decision remains of the minister which is not solely based on matters of national environmental significance but also on the consideration of social and economic impact of the project 17 The Australian Government Minister for the Environment and Energy cannot intervene in a proposal if it has no significant impact on one of the eight matters of national environmental significance regardless of any other undesirable environmental impacts 17 This is primarily due to the division of powers between the states and the Federal government and the Australian Government environment minister not being able to overturn a state decision citation needed There are strict civil and criminal penalties for the breach of EPBC Act Depending on the kind of breach civil penalty maximum may go up to 550 000 for an individual and 5 5 million for a body corporate or for criminal penalty maximum of seven years imprisonment and or penalty of 46 200 17 The State and Territory Level Edit Australian Capital Territory ACT Edit EIA provisions within Ministerial Authorities in the ACT are found in the Chapters 7 and 8 of the Planning and Development Act 2007 ACT EIA in ACT was previously administered with the help of Part 4 of the Land Planning and Environment Act 1991 Land Act and Territory Plan plan for land use 16 Note that some EIA may occur in the ACT on Commonwealth land under the EPBC Act Cth Further provisions of the Australian Capital Territory Planning and Land Management Act 1988 Cth may also be applicable particularly to national land and designated areas citation needed New South Wales NSW Edit In New South Wales the Environment Planning and Assessment Act 1979 EP amp A Act establishes two pathways for EIA The first is under Division 5 2 of the EP amp A Act which provides for EIA of State Significant Infrastructure projects from June 2011 this Part replaced the previous Part 3A which previously covered EIA of major projects The second is under Part 4 of the EP amp A Act dealing with development assessments for local regional and State Significant Developments other than State Significant Infrastructure 16 Northern Territory NT Edit The EIA process in Northern Territory is chiefly administered under the Environmental Assessment Act EAA 18 Although EAA is the primary tool for EIA in Northern Territory there are further provisions for proposals in the Inquiries Act 1985 NT 16 Queensland QLD Edit There are four main EIA processes in Queensland 19 Firstly under the Integrated Planning Act 1997 IPA for development projects other than mining Secondly under the Chapter 3 of the Environmental Protection Act 1994 Qld EP Act for some mining and petroleum activities Thirdly under the State Development and Public Works Organisation Act 1971 Qld State Development Act for significant projects Finally under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 Cth for controlled actions 19 South Australia SA The local governing tool for EIA in South Australia is the Development Act 1993 SA There are three levels of assessment possible under the Act in the form of an environment impact statement EIS a public environmental report PER or a Development Report DR 16 Tasmania TAS Edit In Tasmania an integrated system of legislation is used to govern development and approval process this system is a mixture of the Environmental Management and Pollution Control Act 1994 Tas EMPC Act Land Use Planning and Approvals Act 1993 Tas LUPA Act State Policies and Projects Act 1993 Tas SPPA and Resource Management and Planning Appeals Tribunal Act 1993 Tas 16 Victoria VIC Edit The EIA process in Victoria is intertwined with the Environment Effects Act 1978 Vic and the Ministerial Guidelines for Assessment of Environmental Effects made under the s 10 of the EE Act 20 Western Australia WA Edit Part 4 of the Environmental Protection Act 1986 WA provides the legislative framework for the EIA process in Western Australia 21 The EPA Act oversees the planning and development proposals and assesses their likely impacts on the environment citation needed Canada EditIn Friends of the Oldman River Society v Canada Minister of Transportation SCC 1992 La Forest J of the Supreme Court of Canada described environmental impact assessment in terms of the proper scope of federal jurisdiction with respect to environments matters Environmental impact assessment is in its simplest form a planning tool that is now generally regarded as an integral component of sound decision making 22 Supreme Court Justice La Forest cited Cotton amp Emond 1981 p 245 The basic concepts behind environmental assessment are simply stated 1 early identification and evaluation of all potential environmental consequences of a proposed undertaking 2 decision making that both guarantees the adequacy of this process and reconciles to the greatest extent possible the proponent s development desires with environmental protection and preservation 23 La Forest referred to Jeffery 1989 1 2 1 4 and Emond 1978 p 5 who described environmental assessments as a planning tool with both an information gathering and a decision making component that provide an objective basis for granting or denying approval for a proposed development 24 25 Justice La Forest addressed his concerns about the implications of Bill C 45 regarding public navigation rights on lakes and rivers that would contradict previous cases La Forest 1973 pp 178 80 26 The Canadian Environmental Assessment Act 2012 CEAA 2012 27 and its regulations establish the legislative basis for the federal practice of environmental assessment in most regions of Canada 28 29 30 CEAA 2012 came into force July 6 2012 and replaces the former Canadian Environmental Assessment Act 1995 EA is defined as a planning tool to identify understand assess and mitigate where possible the environmental effects of a project The purposes of this Act are a to protect the components of the environment that are within the legislative authority of Parliament from significant adverse environmental effects caused by a designated project b to ensure that designated projects that require the exercise of a power or performance of a duty or function by a federal authority under any Act of Parliament other than this Act to be carried out are considered in a careful and precautionary manner to avoid significant adverse environmental effects c to promote cooperation and coordinated action between federal and provincial governments with respect to environmental assessments d to promote communication and cooperation with aboriginal peoples with respect to environmental assessments e to ensure that opportunities are provided for meaningful public participation during an environmental assessment f to ensure that an environmental assessment is completed in a timely manner g to ensure that projects as defined in section 66 that are to be carried out on federal lands or those that are outside Canada and that are to be carried out or financially supported by a federal authority are considered in a careful and precautionary manner to avoid significant adverse environmental effects h to encourage federal authorities to take actions that promote sustainable development in order to achieve or maintain a healthy environment and a healthy economy and i to encourage the study of the cumulative effects of physical activities in a region and the consideration of those study results in environmental assessments 31 Canadian Environmental Assessment Act Opposition Edit Environmental Lawyer Dianne Saxe argued that the CEAA 2012 allows the federal government to create mandatory timelines for assessments of even the largest and most important projects regardless of public opposition 32 Now that federal environmental assessments are gone the federal government will only assess very large very important projects But it s going to do them in a hurry Dianne Saxe 32 On 3 August 2012 the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency designated nine projects Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline Joint Review Panel JRP 18 months Marathon Platinum Group Metals and Copper Mine Project JRP 33 13 months Site C Clean Energy Project JRP 8 5 months Deep Geologic Repository Project JRP 17 months Enbridge Northern Gateway Project JRP 18 months Jackpine Mine Expansion Project JRP 11 5 months Pierre River Mine Project 34 8 months New Prosperity Gold Copper Mine Project JRP 7 5 months Frontier Oil Sands Mine Project JRP 35 36 8 5 months EnCana Cenovus Shallow Gas Infill Project JRP 5 months 37 Saxe compares these timelines with environmental assessments for the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Thomas R Berger Royal Commissioner of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry 9 May 1977 worked extremely hard to ensure that industrial development on Aboriginal people s land resulted in benefits to those indigenous people 38 On 22 April 2013 NDP MP Megan Leslie issued a statement claiming that the Harper government s recent changes to fish habitat protection the Navigable Waters Protection Act and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act along with gutting existing laws and making cuts to science and research will be disastrous not only for the environment but also for Canadians health and economic prosperity 39 On 26 September 2012 Leslie argued that with the changes to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act that came into effect 6 July 2012 seismic testing dams wind farms and power plants no longer required any federal environmental assessment She also claimed that because the CEAA 2012 which she claimed was rushed through Parliament dismantled the CEAA 1995 the Oshawa ethanol plant project would no longer have a full federal environmental assessment 40 Mr Peter Kent Minister of the Environment explained that the CEAA 2012 provides for the Government of Canada and the Environmental Assessment Agency to focus on the large and most significant projects that are being proposed across the country The 2 000 to 3 000 plus smaller screenings that were in effect under CEAA 1995 became the responsibility of lower levels of government but are still subject to the same strict federal environmental laws 40 Anne Minh Thu Quach MP for Beauharnois Salaberry QC argued that the mammoth budget bill dismantled 50 years of environmental protection without consulting Canadians about the colossal changes they are making to environmental assessments She claimed that the federal government is entering into limited consultations by invitation only months after the damage was done 40 China Edit The Environmental Impact Assessment Law EIA Law requires that an environmental impact assessment be completed prior to project construction However if a developer completely ignores this requirement and builds a project without submitting an environmental impact statement the only penalty is that the environmental protection bureau EPB may require the developer to do a make up environmental assessment If the developer does not complete this make up assessment within the designated time only then is the EPB authorized to fine the developer Even so the possible fine is capped at a maximum of about US 25 000 a fraction of the overall cost of most major projects The lack of more stringent enforcement mechanisms has resulted in a significant percentage of projects not completing legally required environmental impact assessments prior to construction 41 China s State Environmental Protection Administration SEPA used the legislation to halt 30 projects in 2004 including three hydro power plants under the Three Gorges Project Company Although one month later Note as a point of reference that the typical EIA for a major project in the USA takes one to two years most of the 30 halted projects resumed their construction reportedly having passed the environmental assessment the fact that these key projects construction was ever suspended was notable citation needed A joint investigation by SEPA and the Ministry of Land and Resources in 2004 showed that 30 40 of the mining construction projects went through the procedure of environment impact assessment as required while in some areas only 6 7 did so This partly explains why China has witnessed so many mining accidents in recent years citation needed SEPA alone cannot guarantee the full enforcement of environmental laws and regulations observed Professor Wang Canfa director of the centre to help environmental victims at China University of Political Science and Law In fact according to Wang the rate of China s environmental laws and regulations that are actually enforced is estimated at barely 10 42 Egypt Edit Environmental Impact Assessment EIA EIA is implemented in Egypt under the umbrella of the Ministry of state for environmental affairs The Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency EEAA is responsible for the EIA services 43 In June 1997 the responsibility of Egypt s first full time Minister of State for Environmental Affairs was assigned as stated in the Presidential Decree no 275 1997 From thereon the new ministry has focused in close collaboration with the national and international development partners on defining environmental policies setting priorities and implementing initiatives within a context of sustainable development 44 According to the Law 4 1994 for the Protection of the Environment the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency EEAA was restructured with the new mandate to substitute the institution initially established in 1982 At the central level EEAA represents the executive arm of the Ministry 45 The purpose of EIA is to ensure the protection and conservation of the environment and natural resources including human health aspects against uncontrolled development The long term objective is to ensure a sustainable economic development that meets present needs without compromising future generations ability to meet their own needs EIA is an important tool in the integrated environmental management approach 46 EIA must be performed for new establishments or projects and for expansions or renovations of existing establishments according to the Law for the Environment 47 EU Edit A wide range of instruments exist in the Environmental policy of the European Union Among them the European Union has established a mix of mandatory and discretionary procedures to assess environmental impacts 48 Directive 85 337 EEC on Environmental Impact Assessments known as the EIA Directive 49 was first introduced in 1985 amended in 1997 amended again in 2003 following EU signature of the 1998 Aarhus Convention and once more in 2009 50 The initial Directive of 1985 and its three amendments have been codified in Directive 2011 92 EU of 13 December 2011 51 In 2001 the issue was enlarged to include the assessment of plans and programmes by the so called Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA Directive 2001 42 EC which was amended by Directive 2014 52 EU of 16 April 2014 52 48 Under the EU directive a compliant EIA must provide certain information in seven key areas 53 Description of the project Description of actual project and site description Break the project down into its key components i e construction operations decommissioning For each component list all of the sources of environmental disturbance For each component all the inputs and outputs must be listed e g air pollution noise hydrology Alternatives that have been considered Examine alternatives that have been considered Example in a biomass power station will the fuel be sourced locally or nationally Description of the environment List of all aspects of the environment that may be affected by the development Example populations fauna flora air soil water humans landscape cultural heritage This section is best carried out with the help of local experts e g the RSPB in the UK Description of the significant effects on the environment The word significant is crucial here as the definition can vary Significant must be defined The most frequent method used here is use of the Leopold matrix The matrix is a tool used in the systematic examination of potential interactions Example in a windfarm development a significant impact may be collisions with birds Mitigation This is where EIA is most useful Once section 4 is complete it is obvious where impacts are greatest Using this information in ways to avoid negative impacts should be developed Best working with the developer with this section as they know the project best Using the windfarm example again construction might take place outside of bird nesting seasons or removal of hardstanding on a potentially contaminated land site might take place outside of the rainy season Non technical summary EIS The EIA is in the public domain and be used in the decision making process It is important that the information is available to the public This section is a summary that does not include jargon or complicated diagrams It should be understood by the informed lay person Lack of know how technical difficulties This section is to advise any areas of weakness in knowledge It can be used to focus areas of future research Some developers see the EIA as a starting block for poor environmental managementIn 2021 ESG reporting requirements changed in the EU and UK The EU started enforcing the Sustainable Finance Disclosures Regulation SFDR which was created with the purpose of unifying climate risk disclosures across the private sector by 2023 It also requires businesses to report on principal adverse impacts for society and the environment 54 Annexed projects Edit All projects are either classified as Annex 1 or Annex 2 projects Those lying in Annex 1 are large scale developments such as motorways chemical works bridges power stations etc These always require an EIA under the Environmental Impact Assessment Directive 85 337 EEC as amended Annex 2 projects are smaller in scale than those referred to in Annex 1 Member States must determine whether these project shall be made subject to an assessment subject to a set of criteria set out in Annex 3 of codified Directive 2011 92 EU citation needed The Netherlands Edit EIA was implemented in Dutch legislation on September 1 1987 The categories of projects which require an EIA are summarised in Dutch legislation the Wet milieubeheer The use of thresholds for activities makes sure that EIA is obligatory for those activities that may have considerable impacts on the environment citation needed For projects and plans which fit these criteria an EIA report is required The EIA report defines a o the proposed initiative it makes clear the impact of that initiative on the environment and compares this with the impact of possible alternatives with less a negative impact 55 United Kingdom Edit The EU Directives concerning environmental impact assessment are implemented in England through the Town and Country Planning Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations 2017 which also apply to projects serving national defence purposes in Northern Ireland Scotland and Wales 56 Hong Kong Edit EIA in Hong Kong is regulated by the Environmental Impact Assessment Ordinance 1997 which became effective in 1998 citation needed The original proposal to construct the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line overground across the Long Valley failed to get through EIA and the Kowloon Canton Railway Corporation had to change its plan and build the railway underground In April 2011 the EIA of the Hong Kong section of the Hong Kong Zhuhai Macau Bridge was found to have breached the ordinance and was declared unlawful The appeal by the government was allowed in September 2011 However it was estimated that this EIA court case had increased the construction cost of the Hong Kong section of the bridge by HK 6 5 billion in money of the day prices 57 Iraq Edit The Ministry of Environment of the federal government of Iraq is in charge of issuing Environmental compliance certificates based on an EIA report prepared by professional consultant and thoroughly reviewed by MOE Any project or activity prior to its establishment or even already existing project has to be approved and obtain such certificate from the MOE Projects are classified into 3 categories A B and C EIA report is usually obligatory for those projects and activities falling under categories A large scale and B small scale that may have considerable impacts on environment 58 An example of A category activities such as dams and reservoirs forestry production projects industrial plants irrigation drainage and flood control land clearance and leveling port and harbor development river basin development thermal power and hydro power development manufacture transportation and use of pesticides or other hazardous materials hazardous waste management and disposal etc An example of B category activities such as agro industries electrical transmission renewable energy rural electrification tourism rehabilitation or maintenance of highway or rural roads rehabilitation or modification of existing industrial facilities etc preparation of EIA report is usually exempt for projects falling under category C that may have low to no impact on environment and example of C category activities small fish breeding pond institutional development most human resources projects etc citation needed The main environmental legislations in Iraq are Law No 64 for cities and land use 1965 Law No 21 for noise prevention 1966 Law No 25 for system of rivers and other water resources protection 1967 Law No 99 for ionized radiation 1980 Law No 89 for public health drinking water provision sanitation and environmental monitoring 1981 Law No 79 for protection and improvement of environment 1986 Environmental criteria for agricultural industrial and public service projects 1990 Law No 3 for protection and improvement of environment 1997 Law No 2 for water systems protection 2001 Law No 44 for creation of Ministry of Environment instead of the council of protection and improvement of environment 2003 Law No 27 for environmental protection and improvement 2009 59 Law No 4 for protection of ambient air system 2012 citation needed Meanwhile Environmental Protection and Improvement Board in the regional government of Kurdistan in the northern Iraq Erbil Duhok Sulaimany and Garmyan is responsible of issuing Environmental compliance certificate the board was established according to law No 3 Environmental protection and improvement board in Iraqi Kurdistan Region 2010 60 The board is responsible of issuing such certificate for all projects and activities except of petroleum operation which EIA process is organized and implemented by the Ministry of Natural Resources of Kurdistan Regional government 61 The same Iraqi Environmental Legislations mentioned are adopted but the procedure of EIA in Iraqi Kurdistan region government may differ from the one in the Federal government of Iraq citation needed India Edit The Ministry of Environment Forests and Climate Change MoEFCC of India has been in a great effort in Environmental Impact Assessment in India The main laws in action are the Water Act 1974 the Indian Wildlife Protection Act 1972 the Air Prevention and Control of Pollution Act 1981 and the Environment Protection Act 1986 Biological Diversity Act 2002 62 The responsible body for this is the Central Pollution Control Board citation needed Environmental Impact Assessment EIA studies need a significant amount of primary and secondary environmental data Primary data are those collected in the field to define the status of the environment like air quality data water quality data etc Secondary data are those collected over the years that can be used to understand the existing environmental scenario of the study area The environmental impact assessment EIA studies are conducted over a short period of time and therefore the understanding of the environmental trends based on a few months of primary data has limitations Ideally the primary data must be considered along with the secondary data for complete understanding of the existing environmental status of the area In many EIA studies the secondary data needs could be as high as 80 of the total data requirement EIC is the repository of one stop secondary data source for environmental impact assessment in India citation needed The Environmental Impact Assessment EIA experience in India indicates that the lack of timely availability of reliable and authentic environmental data has been a major bottleneck in achieving the full benefits of EIA The environment being a multi disciplinary subject a multitude of agencies are involved in collection of environmental data However no single organization in India tracks available data from these agencies and makes it available in one place in a form required by environmental impact assessment practitioners Further environmental data is not available in enhanced forms that improve the quality of the EIA This makes it harder and more time consuming to generate environmental impact assessments and receive timely environmental clearances from regulators With this background the Environmental Information Centre EIC has been set up to serve as a professionally managed clearinghouse of environmental information that can be used by MoEF project proponents consultants NGOs and other stakeholders involved in the process of environmental impact assessment in India EIC caters to the need of creating and disseminating of organized environmental data for various developmental initiatives all over the country citation needed EIC stores data in GIS format and makes it available to all environmental impact assessment studies and to EIA stakeholders citation needed In 2020 the Government of India proposed a new EIA 2020 Draft which was widely criticized for heavily diluting the EIA 63 Many Environmental groups started a campaign demanding the withdrawal of the Draft in face of these campaigns the Government of India resorted to banning blocking the websites of these groups 64 Malaysia Edit In Malaysia Section 34A Environmental Quality Act 1974 65 requires developments that have significant impact to the environment are required to conduct the Environmental impact assessment 66 67 Nepal Edit In Nepal EIA has been integrated in major development projects since the early 1980s In the planning history of Nepal the sixth plan 1980 85 for the first time recognized the need for EIA with the establishment of Environmental Impact Study Project EISP under the Department of Soil Conservation in 1982 to develop necessary instruments for integration of EIA in infrastructure development projects However the government of Nepal enunciated environment conservation related policies in the seventh plan NPC 1985 1990 To enforce this policy and make necessary arrangements a series of guidelines were developed thereby incorporating the elements of environmental factors right from the project formulation stage of the development plans and projects and to avoid or minimize adverse effects on the ecological system In addition it has also emphasized that EIAs of industry tourism water resources transportation urbanization agriculture forest and other developmental projects be conducted citation needed In Nepal the government s Environmental Impact Assessment Guideline of 1993 inspired the enactment of the Environment Protection Act EPA of 1997 and the Environment Protection Rules EPR of 1997 EPA and EPR have been enforced since 24 and 26 June 1997 respectively in Nepal to internalizing the environmental assessment system The process institutionalized the EIA process in development proposals and enactment which makes the integration of IEE and EIA legally binding to the prescribed projects The projects requiring EIA or IEE are included in Schedules 1 and 2 of the EPR 1997 GoN MoLJPA 1997 citation needed New Zealand Edit In New Zealand EIA is usually referred to as Assessment of Environmental Effects AEE The first use of EIA s dates back to a Cabinet minute passed in 1974 called Environmental Protection and Enhancement Procedures This had no legal force and only related to the activities of government departments When the Resource Management Act was passed in 1991 an EIA was required as part of a resource consent application Section 88 of the Act specifies that the AEE must include such detail as corresponds with the scale and significance of the effects that the activity may have on the environment While there is no duty to consult any person when making a resource consent application Sections 36A and Schedule 4 proof of consultation is almost certain required by local councils when they decide whether or not to publicly notify the consent application under Section 93 68 Pakistan Edit The Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency is an executive agency of the Government of Pakistan managed by the Ministry of Climate Change The agency is charged with protecting human health and the environment by writing and enforcing regulations based on laws passed by Parliament The Directorate of Environmental Impact Assessment EIA or Initial Environmental Examination IEE is tasked with implementing the Pakistan Environment Protection Act PEPA 1997 specifically Section 12 and Review of IEE EIA Regulations 2000 This Directorate comprises two sections namely EIA or Monitoring and Environment Engineering And Technology Transfer All public and private sector developmental projects that fall under any of the Schedules of Regulations have to obtain environmental approval in respect of their projects The EIA Monitoring Section also conducts post environmental approval monitoring to ascertain the compliance status of the Environment Management Plan EMP 69 Russian Federation Edit As of 2004 update the state authority responsible for conducting the State EIA in Russia has been split between two Federal bodies 1 Federal service for monitoring the use of natural resources a part of the Russian Ministry for Natural Resources and Environment and 2 Federal Service for Ecological Technological and Nuclear Control The two main pieces of environmental legislation in Russia are the Federal Law On Ecological Expertise 1995 and the Regulations on Assessment of Impact from Intended Business and Other Activity on Environment in the Russian Federation 2000 70 Federal Service for monitoring the use of natural resourcesIn 2006 the parliament committee on ecology in conjunction with the Ministry for Natural Resources and Environment created a working group to prepare a number of amendments to existing legislation to cover such topics as stringent project documentation for building of potentially environmentally damaging objects as well as building of projects on the territory of protected areas There has been some success in this area as evidenced from abandonment of plans to construct a gas pipe line through the only remaining habitat of the critically endangered Amur leopard in the Russian Far East citation needed Federal Service for Ecological Technological and Nuclear ControlThe government s decision to hand over control over several important procedures including state EIA in the field of all types of energy projects to the Federal Service for Ecological Technological and Nuclear Control has caused major controversy and elicited criticism from environmental groups which have blamed the government for giving nuclear power industry control over the state EIA citation needed The main problem concerning State EIA in Russia is the clear differentiation of jurisdiction between the two above mentioned Federal bodies citation needed Sri Lanka Edit The National Environmental Act 1998 requires environmental impact assessment for large scale projects in sensitive areas It is enforced by the Central Environmental Authority 71 Ukraine Edit The new law of Ukraine on evaluation of impact on surroundings prescribes the requirements of environmental safety rational use of national resources minimizing of harmful impact on surroundings in the process of making managerial decisions about planned activity The designing of the conclusion of evaluation of impact is a result of its conducting The key moment of the law on evaluation of impact on surroundings is a substitution of conclusion of state environmental expertise on the conclusion of evaluation of impact on surroundings Business entity is forbidden to conduct or to start its planned activity without the conclusion of impact on surroundings 72 United States Edit Main article National Environmental Policy Act The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 NEPA enacted in 1970 established a policy of environmental impact assessment for federal agency actions federally funded activities or federally permitted licensed activities that in the U S is termed environmental review or simply the NEPA process 73 The law also created the Council on Environmental Quality which promulgated regulations to codify the law s requirements 74 Under United States environmental law an Environmental Assessment EA is compiled to determine the need for an Environmental Impact Statement EIS Federal or federalized actions expected to subject or be subject to significant environmental impacts will publish a Notice of Intent to Prepare an EIS as soon as significance is known Certain actions of federal agencies must be preceded by the NEPA process Contrary to a widespread misconception NEPA does not prohibit the federal government or its licensees permittees from harming the environment nor does it specify any penalty if an environmental impact assessment turns out to be inaccurate intentionally or otherwise NEPA requires that plausible statements as to the prospective impacts be disclosed in advance The purpose of NEPA process is to ensure that the decision maker is fully informed of the environmental aspects and consequences prior to making the final decision citation needed Environmental assessment Edit An environmental assessment EA is an environmental analysis prepared pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act to determine whether a federal action would significantly affect the environment and thus require a more detailed Environmental Impact Statement EIS The certified release of an Environmental Assessment results in either a Finding of No Significant Impact FONSI or an EIS 75 The Council on Environmental Quality CEQ which oversees the administration of NEPA issued regulations for implementing the NEPA in 1979 Eccleston reports that the NEPA regulations barely mention preparation of EAs This is because the EA was originally intended to be a simple document used in relatively rare instances where an agency was not sure if the potential significance of an action would be sufficient to trigger preparation of an EIS But today because EISs are so much longer and complicated to prepare federal agencies are going to great effort to avoid preparing EISs by using EAs even in cases where the use of EAs may be inappropriate The ratio of EAs that are being issued compared to EISs is about 100 to 1 76 In July 2020 President Donald Trump moved to significantly weaken NEPA CEQ published a final rule which limits the duration of EAs to 1 year and EISs to 2 years The rule also exempts a number of projects from review entirely and prevents the consideration of cumulative environmental impacts including those caused by climate change The rule went into effect on September 14 2020 and is the first update to the CEQ regulations since their promulgation in 1978 77 78 Content Edit The Environmental Assessment is a concise public document prepared by the federal action agency that serves to briefly provide sufficient evidence and analysis for determining whether to prepare an EIS or a Finding of No Significant Impact FONSI Demonstrate compliance with the act when no EIS is required facilitate the preparation of an EIS when a FONSI cannot be demonstratedThe Environmental Assessment includes a brief discussion of the purpose and need of the proposal and of its alternatives as required by NEPA 102 2 E and of the human environmental impacts resulting from and occurring to the proposed actions and alternatives considered practicable plus a listing of studies conducted and agencies and stakeholders consulted to reach these conclusions The action agency must approve an EA before it is made available to the public The EA is made public through notices of availability by local state or regional clearing houses often triggered by the purchase of a public notice advertisement in a newspaper of general circulation in the proposed activity area citation needed Structure Edit The structure of a generic Environmental Assessment is as follows Summary Introduction Background Purpose and Need for Action Proposed Action Decision Framework Public Involvement Issues Alternatives including the Proposed Action Alternatives Mitigation Common to All Alternatives Comparison of Alternatives Environmental Consequences Consultation and CoordinationProcedure Edit The EA becomes a draft public document when notice of it is published usually in a newspaper of general circulation in the area affected by the proposal There is a 15 day review period required for an Environmental Assessment 30 days if exceptional circumstances while the document is made available for public commentary and a similar time for any objection to improper process Commenting on the Draft EA is typically done in writing or email submitted to the lead action agency as published in the notice of availability An EA does not require a public hearing for verbal comments Following the mandated public comment period the lead action agency responds to any comments and certifies either a FONSI or a Notice of Intent NOI to prepare an EIS in its public environmental review record The preparation of an EIS then generates a similar but more lengthy involved and expensive process citation needed Environmental impact statement Edit Main article Environmental impact statement The adequacy of an environmental impact statement EIS can be challenged in federal court Major proposed projects have been blocked because of an agency s failure to prepare an acceptable EIS One prominent example was the Westway landfill and highway development in and along the Hudson River in New York City 79 Another prominent case involved the Sierra Club suing the Nevada Department of Transportation over its denial of the club s request to issue a supplemental EIS addressing air emissions of particulate matter and hazardous air pollutants in the case of widening U S Route 95 through Las Vegas 80 The case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit which led to construction on the highway being halted until the court s final decision The case was settled prior to the court s final decision citation needed Several state governments that have adopted little NEPAs state laws imposing EIS requirements for particular state actions Some of those state laws such as the California Environmental Quality Act refer to the required environmental impact study as an environmental impact report 81 This variety of state requirements produces voluminous data not just upon impacts of individual projects but also in insufficiently researched scientific domains For example in a seemingly routine Environmental Impact Report for the city of Monterey California information came to light that led to the official federal endangered species listing of Hickman s potentilla a rare coastal wildflower 82 83 Transboundary application EditEnvironmental threats do not respect national borders International pollution can have detrimental effects on the atmosphere oceans rivers aquifers farmland the weather and biodiversity Global climate change is transnational Specific pollution threats include acid rain radioactive contamination debris in outer space stratospheric ozone depletion and toxic oil spills The Chernobyl disaster precipitated by a nuclear accident on April 26 1986 is a stark reminder of the devastating effects of transboundary nuclear pollution 84 Environmental protection is inherently a cross border issue and has led to the creation of transnational regulation via multilateral and bilateral treaties The United Nations Conference on the Human Environment UNCHE or Stockholm Conference held in Stockholm in 1972 and the United Nations Conference on the Environment and Development UNCED or Rio Summit Rio Conference or Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 were key in the creation of about 1 000 international instruments that include at least some provisions related to the environment and its protection 85 The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe s Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context Espoo Convention was negotiated to provide an international legal framework for transboundary EIA 86 However as there is no universal legislature or administration with a comprehensive mandate most international treaties exist parallel to one another and are further developed without the benefit of consideration being given to potential conflicts with other agreements There is also the issue of international enforcement 87 This has led to duplications and failures in part due to an inability to enforce agreements An example is the failure of many international fisheries regimes to restrict harvesting practises 88 Criticism EditAccording to Jay et al EIA is used as a decision aiding tool rather than decision making tool There is growing dissent about them as their influence on decisions is limited Improved training for practitioners guidance on bestpractice and continuing research have all been proposed 89 EIAs have been criticized for excessively limiting their scope in space and time No accepted procedure exists for determining such boundaries The boundary refers to the spatial and temporal boundary of the proposal s effects This boundary is determined by the applicant and the lead assessor but in practice almost all EIAs address only direct and immediate on site effects 90 Development causes both direct and indirect effects Consumption of goods and services production use and disposal of building materials and machinery additional land use for activities of manufacturing and services mining and refining etc all have environmental impacts The indirect effects of development can be much higher than the direct effects examined by an EIA Proposals such as airports or shipyards cause wide ranging national and international effects which should be covered in EIAs 91 Broadening the scope of EIA can benefit the conservation of threatened species Instead of concentrating on the project site some EIAs employed a habitat based approach that focused on much broader relationships among humans and the environment As a result alternatives that reduce the negative effects to the population of whole species rather than local subpopulations can be assessed 92 Thissen and Agusdinata 93 have argued that little attention is given to the systematic identification and assessment of uncertainties in environmental studies which is critical in situations where uncertainty cannot be easily reduced by doing more research In line with this Maier et al 94 have concluded on the need to consider uncertainty at all stages of the decision making process In such a way decisions can be made with confidence or known uncertainty These proposals are justified on data that shows that environmental assessments fail to predict accurately the impacts observed Tenney et al 95 and Wood et al 96 have reported evidence of the intrinsic uncertainty attached to EIAs predictions from a number of case studies worldwide The gathered evidence consisted of comparisons between predictions in EIAs and the impacts measured during or following project implementation In explaining this trend Tenney et al 95 have highlighted major causes such as project changes modelling errors errors in data and assumptions taken and bias introduced by people in the projects analyzed Some approaches to deal with uncertainty in EIA have been reviewed in 97 There has also been criticism on the EIAs in the United States not addressing environmental justice concerns sufficiently Yakuba writes However environmental history provides evidence that political process and special interests govern the attainment of the EJ goal by way of inadequate adherence to the NEPA provisions Public participation PP is a principal requirement for achieving environmental justice and constitutes a pivotal determinant of EIA outcome 98 Most recent analyses indicated that the persistent problem may have its roots in socio cultural settings and environment nurturing cultural value should be regarded as one among major progressive cultures and its implementation will need to engage the corporate sector 99 See also EditEconomic impact analysis Evaluates economic effect of an event Environmental good Non market public goods Environmental impact design Aims to benefit the environment Environmental indicator Measure used to evaluate environmental change Environmental policy of the European Union Environment protection policy Environmental social and corporate governance Business frameworkPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Equator Principles Risk management framework Global environmental analysis Analysis of the global environment of a company Healthy development measurement tool Evaluates impact of urban development Hydropower Sustainability Assessment Protocol Framework to assess hydropower projects Leopold matrix Environmental impact assessment method Natural landscape Original landscape formed by nature Phase I environmental site assessment Identifies environment contamination risk Risk assessment Estimation of risk associated with exposure to a given set of hazards Social impact assessment Reviews infrastructure and development Strategic environmental assessment United Nations Environment Programme Aims to help solve environmental issues Sustainability appraisal Aspect of UK planning law List of international environmental agreementsReferences Edit MacKinnon A J Duinker P N Walker T R 2018 The Application of Science in Environmental Impact Assessment Routledge Eccleston Charles H 2011 Environmental Impact Assessment A Guide to Best Professional Practices Chapter 5 ISBN 978 1439828731 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 227 Principle of Environmental Impact Assessment Best Practice PDF International Association for Impact Assessment 1999 Archived from the original PDF on May 5 2012 Retrieved September 15 2020 Holder J 2004 Environmental Assessment The Regulation of Decision Making Oxford University Press New York For a comparative discussion of the elements of various domestic EIA systems see Christopher Wood Environmental Impact Assessment A Comparative Review 2 ed Prentice Hall Harlow 2002 See for example Environmental movement in the United States Clark amp Canter 1997 p 199 Rychlak amp Case 2010 p 111 120 Kershner 2011 Daniel Stavros E Tsoulfas Giannis T Pappis Costas P Rachaniotis Nikos P 2004 Aggregating and evaluating the results of different Environmental Impact Assessment methods Ecological Indicators 4 2 125 138 doi 10 1016 j ecolind 2004 01 003 Hitzschky K Silviera J 2009 A proposed impact assessment method for genetically modified plants As GMP method Environmental Impact Assessment Review 29 6 348 368 doi 10 1016 j eiar 2009 02 006 Peche R amp Rodriguez E 2009 Environmental impact Assessment procedure A new approach based on Fuzzy logic Environmental Impact Assessment review 29 275 283 Duarte O 2000 Tecnicas Difusas en la Evaluacion de Impacto Ambiental Ph D Thesis Universidad de Granada ARAI Research Group Granada Spain Environmental Impact Assessment at University of Granada Archived 2014 10 25 at the Wayback Machine Wilson L 1998 A Practical Method for Environmental Impact Assessment Audits Environ Impact Assess Rev 18 59 71 a b c d e f Elliott M amp Thomas I 2009 Environment Impact Assessment in Australia Theory and Practice 5th Edn Federation Press Sydney a b c d e f The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act Australia The Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts archived from the original on 7 October 2013 retrieved 9 September 2010 The Northern Territory Government viewed 10 September 2010 a b The Environment Defenders viewed 10 September 2010 EDO factsheet Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine The Law Handbook viewed 9 September 2010 The Government of Western Australia viewed 9 September 2010 SCC 1992 Cotton Roger Emond D Paul 1981 John Swaigen ed Environmental Impact Assessment Environmental Rights in Canada Toronto Ontario Butterworths Jeffery Michael I 1989 Environmental Approvals in Canada Toronto Ontario Butterworths Emond D P 1978 Environmental Assessment Law in Canada Toronto Ontario Emond Montgomery Ltd ISBN 9780920722008 La Forest Gerard V 1973 Water Law in Canada Ottawa Information Canada year SCC num 18 July 2012 2012 SCC num year SCC num CEAA 2012 What is the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act 2012 Basics of Environmental Assessment Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency CEAA 2012 a b Saxe Dianne 9 August 2012 Federal environmental assessments will be rushed Environmental Law and Litigation Archived from the original on 24 November 2012 Agency Canadian Environmental Assessment 19 July 2010 Marathon Platinum Group Metals and Copper Mine Project www ceaa gc ca Agency Canadian Environmental Assessment 13 December 2010 Pierre River Mine Project www ceaa acee gc ca Agency Canadian Environmental Assessment 19 January 2012 Frontier Oil Sands Mine Project www ceaa gc ca Alberta Government of Frontier Oil Sands Mine majorprojects alberta ca Archived from the original on 2017 03 08 Saxe 2012 Host Allan McFee 9 May 1977 The Berger Report is released As It Happens Toronto CBC Radio CBC Radio 1 Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 transcript Retrieved 9 December 2011 Statement by Official Opposition Environment critic Megan Leslie on Earth Day NDP 22 April 2013 Archived from the original on 21 June 2017 a b c Megan Leslie year Question period Wang Alex 2007 02 05 Environmental protection in China the role of law Archived from the original on 2012 05 16 Gu Lin 2005 09 29 China Improves Enforcement of Environmental Laws China Features Archived from the original on 2007 02 04 Ministry of Environment EEAA gt Services gt EIA www eeaa gov eg Retrieved 2022 06 29 Ministry of Environment EEAA gt Services gt EIA www eeaa gov eg Retrieved 2022 06 29 Ministry of Environment EEAA gt Services gt EIA www eeaa gov eg Retrieved 2022 06 29 Ministry of Environment EEAA gt Services gt EIA www eeaa gov eg Retrieved 2022 06 29 About MSEA EEAA Archived from the original on 2013 01 01 Retrieved 2013 01 03 a b Watson Michael November 13 15 2003 Environmental Impact Assessment and European Community Law XIV International Conference Danube River of Cooperation Archived from the original on March 28 2007 EUR Lex 31985L0337 EN eur lex europa eu Environmental Impact Assessment EIA Environment European Commission ec europa eu Retrieved 2022 06 15 DIRECTIVE 2011 92 EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 13 December 2011 on the assessment of the effects of some public and private projects on the environment from Eur Lex Archived 2017 09 07 at the Wayback Machine Directive 2014 52 EU amending Directive 2011 92 EU on the assessment of the effects of certain public and private projects on the environment 16 April 2014 EUR Lex 32001L0042 EN eur lex europa eu Survey 9 in 10 investors do not trust corporate ESG claims edie net Retrieved 2021 08 18 List of criteria for EIA SEA Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine UK Government Environmental Impact Assessment updated 15 March 2019 accessed 22 October 2019 LCQ1 Judicial review case regarding the Environmental Impact Assessment reports of the Hong Kong Zhuhai Macao Bridge Press Releases www info gov hk October 26 2011 Archived from the original on January 19 2012 Retrieved October 27 2011 EIA process in Iraq PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 08 31 Law No 27 of 2009 for protection and improvement of environment PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 09 01 Environmental Legislation guides in Kurdistan Region Iraq PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 01 10 INSTRUCTIONS NO 1 OF 2013 ON THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT OF PETROLEUM OPERATIONS PDF Shibani Ghosh Demystifying the Environmental Clearance Process in India Archived 2015 02 21 at the Wayback Machine NUJS LAW REVIEW January 2 2015 Why EIA 2020 is a sure shot recipe for more environmental disasters Money Control Retrieved 15 July 2020 Environmental Websites Leading The Movement Against India s Controversial New Proposal Are Blocked Vice India Vice Retrieved 15 July 2020 Environmental quality act 1974 amendment 1985 section 34A PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2011 02 15 Environmental laws in malaysia Environmental Laws in Malaysia Time to Walk the Walk Azmi Sharom StuDocu in Indonesian Retrieved 2022 06 17 LAWS OF MALAYSIA ACT A636 ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY AMENDMENT ACT 1985 Assessing the Application and Assessment of Environmental Effects Quality Planning www qualityplanning org nz Retrieved 2022 06 18 DIRECTORATE OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT MONITORING Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 19 December 2022 Department of Environmental Protection Russia Central Environmental Authority Environmental Impact Assessment EIA Procedure in Sri Lanka Central Environmental Authority Central Environmental Authority Archived from the original on 3 November 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2016 MCL LLC Evaluation of impact on surroundings MCL LLC Eric Firado Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 1 November 2017 United States National Environmental Policy Act P L 91 190 Archived 2013 05 16 at the Wayback Machine 83 Stat 852 42 U S C 4321 et seq Approved January 1 1970 U S Council on Environmental Quality NEPA and Agency Planning Code of Federal Regulations 40 CFR 1501 Eccleston Charles H and J Peyton Doub 2010 Preparing NEPA Environmental Assessments A User s Guide to Best Professional Practices ISBN 978 1439808825 Eccleston Charles Doub J Peyton 2012 Preparing NEPA Environmental Assessments A User s Guide to Best Professional Practices CRC Press ISBN 9781439808825 CEQ 2020 07 16 Update to the Regulations Implementing the Procedural Provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act Final rule Federal Register 85 FR 43304 Friedman Lisa 2020 07 15 Trump Weakens Major Conservation Law to Speed Construction Permits The New York Times Sierra Club v United States Army Corps of Engineers Archived 2004 03 28 at the Wayback Machine 701 F 2d 1011 18 ERC 1748 2d Cir 02 25 1983 Ritter John 2003 06 03 Lawsuit pits risks and roads USA Today Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Sive D amp Chertok M Little NEPAs and Environmental Impact Assessment Procedures PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 10 04 Retrieved 2013 01 03 C M Hogan G Deghi M Papineau et al Environmental Impact Report for the Pebble Beach Properties project by Del Monte Forest Earth Metrics Inc Prepared for the city of Monterey and State of California Clearinghouse 1992 U S Federal Register August 2 1995 Volume 60 Number 148 Pages 39326 39337 Sands P 1989 The Environment Community and International Law Harvard International Law Lournal 393 p402 Weiss E 1999 Understanding Compliance with International Environmental Agreements The Bakers Dozen Myths Univ Richmond L R 32 1555 Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context Espoo 1991 Unece org Archived from the original on 2013 01 26 Retrieved 2013 01 03 Wolfrum R amp Matz N 2003 Conflicts in International Environmental Law Max Planck Institut fur Auslandisches Offentliches Recht und Volkerrech Young O 1999 The Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes MIT Press Jay S Jones C Slinn P Wood C 2007 Environmental Impact Assessment Retrospect and Prospect Environmental Impact Assessment Review Elsevier 27 4 289 300 doi 10 1016 j eiar 2006 12 001 Lenzen M Murray S Korte B Dey C 2003 Environmental impact assessment including indirect effects a case study using input output analysis Environmental Impact Assessment Review Elsevier 23 3 263 282 doi 10 1016 S0195 9255 02 00104 X Shepherd A Ortolano L 1996 Strategic environmental assessment for sustainable urban development Environmental Impact Assessment Review Elsevier 16 4 6 321 335 doi 10 1016 S0195 9255 96 00071 6 Fernandes Joao P 2000 EIA procedure Landscape ecology and conservation management Evaluation of alternatives in a highway EIA process Environmental Impact Assessment Review Elsevier 20 6 665 680 doi 10 1016 S0195 9255 00 00060 3 Thissen WIH Agusdinata DB 2008 Handling deep uncertainties in impact assessment In Proceedings of the 28th Annual Conference of the IAIA May 5 9 2008 Perth Australia IAIA Maier HR Ascough JC Wattenbach M Renschler CS Labiosa WB 2008 Uncertainty in Environmental Decision Making Issues Challenges and Future Directions Publications from USDA ARS UNL Faculty Paper 399 USDA ARS UNL Faculty a b Tenney A Kvaerner J Gjerstad KI 2006 Uncertainty in environmental impact assessment predictions the need for better communication and more transparency Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal 24 1 45 56 doi 10 3152 147154606781765345 Wood C Dipper B Jones C 2000 Auditing the assessments of the environmental impacts of planning projects Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 43 1 23 47 doi 10 1080 09640560010757 S2CID 134202298 Cardenas IC Halman JIM 2016 Coping with uncertainty in environmental impact assessments Open techniques Environmental Impact Assessment Review 60 24 39 doi 10 1016 j eiar 2016 02 006 Yakuba O 2018 Delivering Environmental Justice through Environmental Impact Assessment in the United States The Challenge of Public Participation MDPI Vuong Q H 2021 The semiconducting principle of monetary and environmental values exchange Economics and Business Letters 10 3 284 290 doi 10 17811 ebl 10 3 2021 284 290 S2CID 239719169 Sources Edit Clark Ray Canter Larry eds 1997 Environmental Policy and NEPA Past Present and Future Boca Raton Florida St Lucie Press Rychlak Ronald J Case David W 2010 Environmental Law Oceana s Legal Almanac Series New York Oxford University Press pp 111 120 Kershner Jim 27 August 2011 NEPA the National Environmental Policy Act Friends of the Oldman River Society v Canada Minister of Transport 1992 CanLII 110 1992 1 SCR 3 23 January 1992 Supreme Court of Canada Canada Notes EditFurther reading EditCarroll B and Turpin T 2009 Environmental impact assessment handbook 2nd ed Thomas Telford Ltd ISBN 978 0 7277 3509 6 Fischer T B ed 2016 Environmental Assessment Critical Concepts of the Built Environment Routledge New York ISBN 978 1 138 77776 7 Glasson J Therivel R Chadwick A 2005 Introduction to Environmental Impact Assessment London Routledge Hanna K 2009 Environmental Impact Assessment Practice and Participation 2nd ed Oxford Petts J ed Handbook of Environmental Impact Assessment Vols 1 amp 2 Oxford UK Blackwell ISBN 0 632 04772 0 Ruddy T F Hilty L M 2008 Impact assessment and policy learning in the European Commission Environmental Impact Assessment Review 28 2 3 90 doi 10 1016 j eiar 2007 05 001 External links EditEuropean Commission EIA website European Commission funded project on Impact Assessment Tools Environmental Impact Assessment at the University of Sydney International Association for Impact Assessment IAIA Netherlands Commission for Environmental Assessment UNU Open Educational Resource on EIA A Course Module Wiki and Instructional Guide ELM EIA Law Matrix Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Environmental impact assessment amp oldid 1159603565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.