Publication | Closed Access
Paying for Permanence: An Economic Analysis of EPA's Cleanup Decisions at Superfund Sites
112
Citations
6
References
1996
Year
EngineeringWhole Life CostEnvironmental Impact AssessmentAgricultural EconomicsSustainable DevelopmentEnvironmental EconomicsEconomic InstrumentEnvironmental PlanningEnvironmental PolicyEconomic AnalysisCleanup DecisionsEnvironmental Public GoodEconomicsWaste ReductionSuperfund SitesCost-permanence TradeoffBusinessNatural Resource EconomicsSustainabilityPollution
We analyze EPA's cleanup decisions at over 100 Superfund sites and examine whether and how EPA trades off the cost against the permanence of cleanup. EPA's decisions reveal both a preference for permanent solutions and an aversion to cost. For example, EPA prefers incinerating soils to isolating and containing them in place, but not at any price. At larger sites EPA appears willing to accept additional costs of as much as $40 million to incinerate. With regard to environmental equity, we find little evidence that EPA's cost-permanence tradeoff is affected by socioeconomic characteristics in the communities surrounding the sites.
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