Shades of Green: Business, Regulation, and EnvironmentStanford Law and Politics, 2003 - 210 pages In humankind's struggle to prevent further deterioration of its natural environment, the capitalist business corporation - typically thought of as a major source of that degradation - holds one of the keys to success. Yet current-day corporations are different shades of green, varying considerably in environmental performance. They range from environmental laggards who fail to meet even minimal standards to environmental leaders who go substantially beyond compliance with legal standards, with the large majority located at some point between these two poles. This in-depth study of fourteen pulp manufacturing mills in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand provides the most extensive and systematic empirical examination, to date, of the reasons firms achieve the levels of environmental performance that they do. Industrial point-source pollution, which has been regulated for ever threee decades, was an obvious focus for the research. The pulp and paper industry sector was chosen for study because, in every nation, pulp and paper mills, which historically have been sources of extremely serious water pollution and offensive fumes, have been at or near the top of the environmental agenda. Consequently, many firms have been compelled or induced to develop complex systems of internal regulation, facilitating the study of intercompany differences in environmental management abnd their relationship to environmental performance. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 35
Page viii
... Discharges and Production Levels for WA2 and WA4 , 1969-99 42 4.1 4.2 Average Emissions of BOD and AOX Grouped by Jurisdiction Monthly Average AOX Discharges from BC4 and WA4 , 1996–99 84 20 82 Tables 3.1 Discharges as a Percentage of ...
... Discharges and Production Levels for WA2 and WA4 , 1969-99 42 4.1 4.2 Average Emissions of BOD and AOX Grouped by Jurisdiction Monthly Average AOX Discharges from BC4 and WA4 , 1996–99 84 20 82 Tables 3.1 Discharges as a Percentage of ...
Page 42
... Discharges ( lbs / day ) 500000 450000 400000 350000 300000 250000 200000 150000 100000 50000 0 1969 1972 1975 1978 1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 WA2 : BOD discharges WA4 : BOD Discharges WA2 : Cleaner Production Method WA2 ...
... Discharges ( lbs / day ) 500000 450000 400000 350000 300000 250000 200000 150000 100000 50000 0 1969 1972 1975 1978 1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 WA2 : BOD discharges WA4 : BOD Discharges WA2 : Cleaner Production Method WA2 ...
Page 186
... discharges in efficiency units ( pounds per unit of production ) , others in concentration units ( pounds of pollutant per liter of water ) , and others in impact units ( pounds per day ) . However , the data required to make the ...
... discharges in efficiency units ( pounds per unit of production ) , others in concentration units ( pounds of pollutant per liter of water ) , and others in impact units ( pounds per day ) . However , the data required to make the ...
Contents
The License to Operate and Corporate Environmental | 41 |
The License to Operate and Interfirm Differences | 75 |
Environmental Management Style and Corporate | 95 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieved analysis AOX discharges AOX emissions attitudes average BC2corp beyond-compliance measures bleaching bleaching chemicals BOD and TSS British Columbia chlorine dioxide chlorine-free Committed Compliers companies concerns corporate environmental performance correlation costs demands dioxin economic license effluent enforcement envi environ environmental activists environmental management style Environmental Management Systems environmental policies Environmental Regulation Environmental Strategists example external facilities firm's firms green Greenpeace impact innovative investment laggards license to operate ment mental management mill effluent mill managers mill-level mill's nomic paper industry percent permit limits production profit pulp and paper pulp mills reduce regulatory license regulatory permits regulatory regimes regulatory requirements relationship Reluctant Complier reputation response risk ronmental performance sample significant social license pressures standards strategy substantial tion Toxic Release Inventory True Believers U.S. EPA U.S. mills United vironmental wastewater water pollution win-win Zealand