Sustainable Wastewater Management: Is it Possible to Regulate Micropollution in the Future by Learning from the Past? A Policy Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Case and Research Design
2.1. Case and Data
2.2. Instruments for Water Quality Regulation
Logic | Instrument category | Examples of instruments | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
Source-directed | Regulations | Regulations, also called “command and control” instruments, are based on strict guidelines and mandatory requirements from the state towards target groups. To ensure their effective implementation and target fulfillment, control mechanisms and sanctions have to be introduced in parallel, ensuring the prohibition or authorization of substances, procedures, and behaviors. | |
Substance ban | Substance bans lead to a complete prohibition of a certain compound and thus to a cessation of pollution. | ||
Authorization restriction | Authorization restrictions, by contrast to substance bans, do not completely prohibit hazardous substances, but constrain their placement on the market up to a tolerated cap. | ||
Environmental Quality Norm (EQN),
Emission limit | Emission limits and EQN define a mandatory cap on the acceptable amount of a concrete substance in waters. While limits control emissions from specific polluters, EQN regulate imissions in water. Both instruments “theoretically” follow a source-directed approach, but they are primarily introduced for their signaling effect. That is why they often take, at least in implementation, the form of information measures. When emission limits and EQN are exceeded, it is a signal to the regulator that further policy action, such as end-of-pipe measures (to remove pollution) or restrictive instruments (e.g., bans), is necessary. The Water Framework Directive, for instance, largely relies on EQN to control the chemical status of member states’ waters. | ||
Economic instruments | Economic instruments are based on market mechanisms. The idea is that through a change in price, target groups will adjust their behavior and emit fewer pollutants. | ||
Product or Substance charge | A charge is levied on substances or on final products that contain hazardous compounds in order to provide an incentive to reduce the use or consumption of a substance. | ||
Subsidy for behavioral change | Subsidies reward "green" action. They provide for governmental support in return for environmental commitments by the private sector. Hence, subsidies can promote environmentally friendly behavior. Farmers, for instance, could benefit from subsidies in return for applying no or less plant protection products. | ||
Information | Information consists of a transfer of knowledge or persuasive reasoning [26]. Their effectiveness is dependent on how the target group perceives the relevance, evidence or urgency of the communicated information. | ||
Best environmental practice (BEP) | BEP refers to defining codes of conduct [29] (p. 137). Most commonly, BEP are applied to the correct application of pesticides in order to reduce run-off from agricultural fields. | ||
Disposal requirement | Disposal requirements formulate codes of correct waste disposal. They can, for instance, be directed towards households to ensure that chemical waste, such as paint residues or pharmaceuticals, is not discharged through the toilet [8,11]. | ||
Information campaign | Information campaigns deliver insights to consumers, farmers or firms about how to avoid aquatic pollution and, thus, encourage voluntary action. | ||
End-of-pipe | Regulations | Mandatory best available technique (BAT) or other form of compulsory technical standard | With a BAT the regulator defines a technical standard. A mandatory BAT obliges operators of sewage plants to adapt their technical standard to the one defined by the regulator. If a sewage plant does not comply with the BAT, operators must upgrade their plants with a further treatment step. Examples of advanced technical solutions for wastewater treatment, which can filter very small concentrations of pollutants, include ozonation, activated carbon treatment and membrane filtering [30,31]. |
Economic instruments | Subsidy (for improved wastewater treatment) | Where the cost of taking remedial action is too high for individual firms or households, governmental support can help reduce aquatic pollution. Governmental support in the form of a subsidy can be allocated to sewage plants to encourage investments in advanced treatment technology. Commonly, governmental support is granted to research in order to develop innovative solutions. | |
Effluent/emission charge | An effluent charge is paid by those who discharge (treated) wastewater into streams. This way, an effluent charge puts a price on using the environment as a sink [29] (p. 134). | ||
Information | Advice, consulting about BAT | Instead of defining a mandatory BAT, the regulator often defines EQN or emission limits and leaves it to the operator of a sewage plant to decide about the filtering technology. To support operators, the regulator can provide information, advice and consultancy about BATs. | |
Research | In the case of micropollution, research is needed to develop new wastewater technologies able to filter very small concentrations of diverse substances. | ||
Voluntary negotiated measures | Voluntary measures are neither required by law nor encouraged by financial incentives [32] (p. 329). Voluntary measures include investments in treatment technology by the private sector without additional financial support from the government. | ||
Public-private partnership (PPP) | Private-public partnerships (PPP) are non-legally binding treaties negotiated on a case-by-case basis between single firms and a public authority. A PPP can follow an end-of-pipe approach when the negotiated agreement between a firm and a public authority fixes emission charges or improved wastewater treatment. |
2.3. Problem Characteristics and Policy Instrument Choice
- Causation: The idea of “causation” as a problem characteristic is that policy problems can be attributed to actors or factors causing the problem, based on scientific proof. For the choice of appropriate policy instruments, it makes a difference if a problem is due to single or multiple causes, and whether the problem is anthropogenic or naturally occurring.
- Prevalence: Prevalence is about analyzing the magnitude and number of factors contributing to the creation of the problem, including whether the source of the problem is seasonal, all-year-long, local or global [36] (pp. 96–98).
- Effects: Policy problems are diverse in terms of their effects or impacts. The idea is to analyze in detail what is being negatively impacted by a policy problem, which can be as diverse as the environment, humans, the economy, diplomatic relations between countries, and security or peace.
- Scales: Policy problems differ with regard to the scale at which the effects happen. They can produce effects from local, regional, and national levels to an international scale. Depending on the scale, solutions should be introduced by different jurisdictions and affect target groups of different (smaller- or bigger-scale) areas.
2.4. Sustainability Dimensions and Instrument Choice in Water Quality Regulation
- Horizontal and cross-sectoral integration: The integrative approach linking the environment, the economy and civil society concretely calls for coordination among different public and private sectors. This also applies to the design of appropriate instruments to regulate water quality: a sustainable instrument choice for water quality regulation should also have a horizontal character integrating political decision-making and implementation, and a variety of actors and target groups that represent different concerned sectors (such as industry, agriculture, health issues, climate change or biodiversity). Such cross-sectoral integration should therefore guarantee that instruments introduced in one domain do not harm or contradict policy goals in another domain. Ideally, synergies between different sectors could emerge through the integration of private and public actors acting in different political subsystems.
- Vertical and multi-level integration: Similar to horizontal integration, water quality issues also call for a vertical involvement: water problems emerge from the local and regional level to the (inter)national level. Most water bodies do not stop at pre-defined political borders. As such, sustainable instrument design should also guarantee the trans-boundary management of the water resource [42] where different actors representing various jurisdictions and decisional levels are integrated.
- Science-policy interface: Many uncertainties still exist about the consequences of the excessive use of natural resources and the impact of pollution on humans and the environment [43]. The sustainable management of resources thus also depends on the elaboration of the science-policy interface. By enlarging this interface, knowledge can be transferred from academia into the policy making process [44]. This not only holds true for the understanding of the phenomenon (like climate change or micropollution) at stake, but also for an appropriate instrument design. Sustainable instrument choice benefits from enhanced evidence- and expertise-based policymaking [39].
- Long-term and inter-generational: The long-term design of instruments to regulate water quality constitutes a challenge. Policy actors try to maximize flexibility and short-term solutions because of their re-electoral calculus [37]. However, instrument choice should have a long-term goal and should still be adaptable to changes, in order to guarantee that future generations still benefit from intact water quality.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Causation
3.2. Prevalence
3.3. Effect
3.4. Scale
3.5. Synthesis and Sustainability Assessment
Sustainability dimension | Problem characteristics | Characteristics of micropollution | Appropriate source-directed policy instruments | Appropriate end-of-pipe policy instruments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Horizontal and cross-sectoral integration | Causation/ multiple entry paths | Diffuse | Source-directed measures, EQN | |
Point/Wastewater treatment plants | End-of-pipe measures | |||
Causation/ multiple sources | Agricultural discharges | Product charge, BEP, Consulting, Subsidy | ||
Household discharges (from cosmetics, detergents, pharmaceuticals) | Product charge, Information campaigns, Disposal requirements | |||
Industrial discharges | Emission charge, Emission limit, Consulting (expert advice), Disposal requirements, BAT, Subsidy, Voluntary negotiated measures, PPP | |||
Long-term and inter-generational perspective | Prevalence | Omnipresence of causes | EQN, Emission limits | |
Seasonality | BEP | |||
Science-policy interface | Effect | Toxicity risk | Substance bans, Authorization restrictions | |
Uncertainties about effects | Research | |||
Vertical and multi-level integration | Scales | Persistence, bioaccumulation | Internationally coordinated substance bans, Authorization restrictions; On smaller scale: voluntary negotiated measures, PPP |
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Metz, F.; Ingold, K. Sustainable Wastewater Management: Is it Possible to Regulate Micropollution in the Future by Learning from the Past? A Policy Analysis. Sustainability 2014, 6, 1992-2012. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6041992
Metz F, Ingold K. Sustainable Wastewater Management: Is it Possible to Regulate Micropollution in the Future by Learning from the Past? A Policy Analysis. Sustainability. 2014; 6(4):1992-2012. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6041992
Chicago/Turabian StyleMetz, Florence, and Karin Ingold. 2014. "Sustainable Wastewater Management: Is it Possible to Regulate Micropollution in the Future by Learning from the Past? A Policy Analysis" Sustainability 6, no. 4: 1992-2012. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6041992
APA StyleMetz, F., & Ingold, K. (2014). Sustainable Wastewater Management: Is it Possible to Regulate Micropollution in the Future by Learning from the Past? A Policy Analysis. Sustainability, 6(4), 1992-2012. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6041992