The Precautionary Principle and the Prevention of Marine Pollution |
| |
Authors: | Tim Jackson Peter J. Taylor |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Stockholm Environment Institute , Box 2142, 5-103 14, Stockholm;2. Centre for the Study of Environmental Change, Lancaster University , LA1 4YF;3. Political Ecology, Research Group , 34 Cowley Road, Oxford |
| |
Abstract: | This paper argues that the environmental changes witnessed in the past decade call for a new approach to environmental management; an approach based not on the principle of the assimilative capacity of the environment but on the precautionary principle, and the emerging preventive environmental paradigm. Uncertainties in scientific knowledge and complexities in ecological systems have presented specific failures of the assimilative capacity methodology. It is argued that these failures are not circumstantial in nature, nor are they the result of misapplication of science by scientists. Rather, they represent inherent problems in the use of the assimilative capacity concept in environmental management. The emergence of the precautionary principle is discussed and a formulation of the principle is presented. In conjunction with the operational approach of clean production, we believe that this principle offers a sounder basis for the prevention of marine pollution in the next decade. |
| |
Keywords: | Assimilative capacity precautionary principle environmental management |
|
|