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来源类型 | Working Paper |
规范类型 | 论文 |
Voluntary Environmental Agreements in Developing Countries: The Colombian Experience | |
Allen Blackman; Eduardo Uribe; Bart van Hoof; Thomas P. Lyon | |
发表日期 | 2012-02-08 |
出版年 | 2012 |
页码 | EfD DP 12-04 |
语种 | 英语 |
摘要 | According to proponents, voluntary agreements (VAs) negotiated with polluters sidestep weak institutions and other barriers to conventional environmental regulation in developing countries. Yet little is known about their effectiveness. We examine VAs in Colombia, a global leader in the use of these policies. We find that the main motive for using VAs has been to build capacity needed for broader environmental regulatory reform. Their additional effect on environmental performance has been questionable. These findings suggest that in developing Conventional approaches to pollution control rely on legislative mandates for cuts in emissions. Voluntary regulation, on the other hand, offers incentives to reduce emissions. Industrialized countries mainly rely on such regulation to spur overcompliance with mandatory regulation. In developing nations, however, policymakers use it to discourage all-too-common noncompliance with pollution-control laws. In a new RFF Report, Senior Fellow Allen Blackman and his coauthors, Eduardo Uribe, Bart van Hoof, and Tom Lyon, examine the use of voluntary agreements (VAs) negotiated between polluters and regulators in Colombia, presenting new case studies of VAs signed with six parties: the cut-flower, palm oil, electricity and oil sectors, and trade associations in the greater metropolitan regions of Medellín and Cartagena. They find that although these and other VAs mostly failed to improve environmental outcomes, they did have positive impacts on regulatory capacity building—a primary goal of those participating in the agreements. “For both regulators and industry,” according to the authors, “probably the most important motive for participating in VAs was to . . . facilitate exchanges of information between regulators and industry representatives—building environmental management expertise in regulatory agencies and in the private sector, filling gaps and resolving inconsistencies in new regulations, and limiting rent seeking.” Blackman and his coauthors write that the Colombian experience suggests that the most appropriate role for VAs in developing countries may be to build capacity for environmental management, not to improve environmental performance. |
主题 | Development and Environment ; Environmental Economics Topics ; International |
子主题 | Latin America ; Policy Instruments and Evaluation |
URL | http://www.rff.org/research/publications/voluntary-environmental-agreements-developing-countries-colombian-experience-0 |
来源智库 | Resources for the Future (United States) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/41174 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Allen Blackman,Eduardo Uribe,Bart van Hoof,et al. Voluntary Environmental Agreements in Developing Countries: The Colombian Experience. 2012. |
条目包含的文件 | 条目无相关文件。 |
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