Multi-Evolutionary Game Research on Heavy Metal Pollution Control in Soil: Based on a Third-Party Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Construction of Evolutionary Game Models
2.1. Game Subject Analysis
- (1)
- Government and soil-polluting companies. In soil pollution control, the government is the “supervisor” and through the formulation of various laws and regulations on soil pollution control, the violations of soil-polluting companies are controlled. In addition, the government also acts as a “helper” for soil pollution control by providing policy support and tax incentives for enterprises to urge them to carry out pollution control [30,31]. The relationship between the government and soil-polluting companies is shown as a regulated relationship. The government department supervises the implementation of a contract with the soil treatment enterprise. When the soil treatment enterprise violates the relevant laws or contract provisions and soil pollution is not properly controlled, the government can hold the soil-polluting company responsible according to the relevant laws or contract provisions [32]. As a supervised entity, soil-polluting companies should take their pollution control responsibilities seriously, report pollution control information to the government in a timely manner, and accept supervision.
- (2)
- Government and third-party governance companies. The government is the formulator and promoter of the third-party governance system for soil pollution. Thus, the game relationship between the government and the third-party governance company mainly exhibits the relationship between supervisor and supervision [33]. The soil-polluting company entrusts the third-party governance company with the responsibility to control the pollution. The government has the right to supervise its governance to evaluate the effect of soil pollution treatment [34]. If a third-party governance company is fraudulent in its pollution control activities, it shall (a) be responsible for the environmental pollution and ecological damage caused, (b) be punished in accordance with the relevant laws and regulations, and (c) pay compensation for the breach of contract by the soil-polluting company [35]. The government builds a platform for the implementation of third-party governance, establishes support for collaborative relationships, provides preferential policies and financial support for third-party enterprises that strictly control pollution, and increases the enthusiasm of third-party governance companies [36].
- (3)
- Soil-polluting companies and third-party governance companies. In soil pollution management, the relationship between soil-polluting companies and third-party governance companies is represented by the relationship of agency and rent-seeking. Soil-polluting companies bear the responsibility of pollution control and also bear the costs of pollution control and restoration. The third-party governance company shall assume the contracted pollution control responsibilities according to the entrusted requirements of the soil-polluting company [37]. The interests of third-party governance companies are linked closely to the interests of soil-polluting companies. In the process of maximizing profits by both parties, they usually have a tendency to conspire together. The soil-polluting company chooses rent-seeking for the third-party governance company and they conspire to deceive government regulatory agencies. The entrusted pollution control cost is usually much lower than the cost of performing the contract legally [38]. At the same time, the third-party governance company also obtains higher profits as a result of a lack of strict governance, and the environment and the public become the ultimate victims.
2.2. Basic Assumptions
2.3. Model Construction
3. Evolutionary Game Analysis
3.1. The Replication Dynamic Model of the Game Subject
3.2. Government Evolution Stability Strategy
3.3. Evolutionary Game Strategies of Soil-Polluting Companies
3.4. Evolutionary Game Strategies for Third-Party Governance Companies
4. Evolutionary Simulation Analysis
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Strengthen government supervision and punishment. As the policy maker and executor, the government should establish a long-term supervision mechanism with high-pressure and normalized trend that places equal emphasis on supervision and enterprise inspection, comprehensively uses policy implementation methods, and strictly punish enterprise inaction and governance. Aiming at the emerging industry of third-party governance companies, the government should actively guide these companies to exert their governance effects and use their responsibilities to effectively alleviate the pressure of government supervision and reduce the cost of governance of polluting enterprises. The nature and amount of punishment and “zero tolerance” for counterfeiting of soil pollution control effects should be established.
- Establish an open and effective information disclosure system. Government departments can use Internet technology to establish a special “Soil Pollution Control Disclosure Website”, forcing companies to publicize the results of governance, increase information disclosure, and effectively promote external public supervision. In addition, the government can create a blacklist of companies who violated regulations and(or) provided fraudulent data; establish a joint liability system to weaken the probability of collusion between polluting companies and third-party governance companies and ensure that the responsibilities of various entities are fulfilled.
- Improve the incentive mechanism for third-party governance companies. Increase commendations and rewards for serious and responsible third-party governance companies; promote the excellent performance of soil pollution control of enterprises through network platforms, radio, television, and newspapers; build a good image for enterprises; and create a virtuous circle of pollution control. Establish a relevant credit evaluation system and issue a government certification medal for third-party governance companies that meet high technical standards and maintain a good reputation. Polluting companies can prioritize the selection of excellent governance companies when purchasing soil pollution repair services.
- Build a multi-governance mechanism. In contemporary society, the construction of ecological civilization can be established only when all subjects cooperate in unison. The traditional soil pollution control model has promoted the gray area of supervision and has reduced the effect of policy implementation. Therefore, it is necessary to establish a new governance model of mutual assistance and mutual benefit that supports a win–win situation. Diversity and co-governance of soil pollution should be based on principles of equality, openness, and collaboration. The participating parties should better recognize these comprehensive, multi-angle, and systematic governance needs through the flexible allocation of social resources, and in so doing, meet the public’s urgent need for sound ecological environments.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Meaning |
---|---|
Benefits from daily operations of soil-polluting companies | |
The social benefits of establishing a good image during government supervision | |
Soil-polluting companies strictly abide by the law (no rent-seeking) and the treatment fee stipulated in the contract with the third-party governance company | |
Soil-polluting companies do not strictly abide by the law (rent-seeking) and the treatment fee stipulated in the contract with the third-party governance company | |
Rent-seeking fees paid by soil-polluting companies to third-party governance companies | |
The cost of strict pollution control by third-party governance companies | |
Costs of third-party governance companies not strictly controlling pollution | |
When the soil pollution companies abide by the law, the third-party enterprise does not strictly control the pollution and is found by the government supervision, it shall compensate the soil pollution enterprise for the liquidated damages | |
The labor and material costs of government supervision when government chooses to supervise | |
Environmental pollution control costs to the government when third parties do not strictly control pollution | |
Subsidies given by the government when third-party companies strictly control pollution | |
Penalties imposed by the government on soil-polluting companies when the soil-polluting companies do not comply with the law | |
When a third-party governance company does not strictly control pollution, the government will punish the third-party governance company | |
Potential benefits of public image improvement when third-party companies reject rent-seeking |
Strategy Portfolio | Government (X) | Soil-Polluting Companies (Y) | Third-Party Governance Companies (Z) |
---|---|---|---|
{Supervision, Compliance, Strict pollution control} | |||
{Supervision, Compliance, Non-strict pollution control} | |||
{Supervision, Noncompliance, Strict pollution control} | |||
{Supervision, Noncompliance, Non-strict pollution control} | |||
{Nonsupervision, Compliance, Strict pollution control} | 0 | ||
{Nonsupervision, Compliance, Non-strict pollution control} | |||
{Nonsupervision, Noncompliance, Strict pollution control} | |||
{Nonsupervision, Noncompliance, Non-strict pollution control} |
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Xu, S.; Zhou, Z.; Liu, K. Multi-Evolutionary Game Research on Heavy Metal Pollution Control in Soil: Based on a Third-Party Perspective. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135306
Xu S, Zhou Z, Liu K. Multi-Evolutionary Game Research on Heavy Metal Pollution Control in Soil: Based on a Third-Party Perspective. Sustainability. 2020; 12(13):5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135306
Chicago/Turabian StyleXu, Songtao, Zhifang Zhou, and Ke Liu. 2020. "Multi-Evolutionary Game Research on Heavy Metal Pollution Control in Soil: Based on a Third-Party Perspective" Sustainability 12, no. 13: 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135306
APA StyleXu, S., Zhou, Z., & Liu, K. (2020). Multi-Evolutionary Game Research on Heavy Metal Pollution Control in Soil: Based on a Third-Party Perspective. Sustainability, 12(13), 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135306