期刊名称:Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences
印刷版ISSN:1943-815X
电子版ISSN:1943-8168
出版年度:2012
卷号:9
期号:4
页码:219-234
DOI:10.1080/1943815X.2012.693091
语种:English
出版社:Taylor & Francis
摘要:Since the discovery of air pollution traveling from China to the US during the late 1990s, trans-Pacific air pollution (consisting of a range of non-CO2 greenhouse gases) has been an emerging global environmental issue. But how has it been addressed, how does it relate to the existing multilateral air pollution regime, and who are the interested parties? This article addresses these questions by examining the evolution of the science of trans-Pacific air pollution, discussing the way in which this science has been made policy-relevant by researchers working under the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, and by illustrating how American economic interests concerned with the effects of trans-Pacific air pollution on American land values and industry have used this scientific knowledge to lobby the US government for regulatory relief. Trans-Pacific air pollution arguably causes regions of the US to violate National Ambient Air Quality Standards, resulting in unwanted federal involvement in local decision-making and tighter regulatory standards, which impedes local economic development and lowers property values. At the same time, laxer environmental standards in China result in increased pollution and lower American industrial competitiveness. The result has been that the US Chamber of Commerce and the Alliance for American Manufacturing have begun to develop policy alternatives.
关键词:trans-Pacific; air pollution; US Chamber of Commerce; LRTAP; smog; greenhouse gases; Alliance for American Manufacturing