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Pulling The Plug On Mother Earth Essay

, Research Paper


Whether it be through intensified media attention, or due to the efforts of


prominent scientists and other members of society, we have become increasingly


aware of the detrimental effects that technological advances in industry and


agriculture have on the global environment. However, as Carl Sagan points out in


?Pulling the Plug on Mother Earth? awareness is not enough, nor is


society?s response to the catastrophic implications of environmental pollution


rapid enough. Slowness to implement sound strategies are in part due to the fact


that the threats we face are nebulous, since they come in the form of particles


of invisible gases and radioactivity, and in part because response to pollution


appears to be so costly at individual, governmental and corporate levels. It


appears that great material loss, as well as visual manifestation, have been the


only ways to galvanize action towards altering and limiting technologies so that


adverse chemicals and substances are no longer belched into the environment. For


example, Sagan is right on the mark when he indicates that it took the reality


that CFCs were destroying the sensitive but protective ozone layer to encourage


large chemical companies to begin a gradual phase-out of these substances, even


when scientists had already discovered the terrible effects of the chemical


combination. Sagan says that to slowly stop usage of such obviously dangerous


substances is not enough, for even with current conditions, it is estimated that


the damaged ozone layer will require at least 100 years to repair itself. In the


interim, we are risking danger to the food chain, global warming, and increased


cases of skin cancer. Rather than risk these catastrophes, Sagan calls for the


immediate phase-out of CFCs, as well as to improve energy usage, plant trees,


and curb the population explosion as supplemental methods to improve the


environment. While the cause and effect relationship between technological


advances and pollution have certainly influenced public outcry towards change,


and influenced corporations to alter their poisoning mechanisms, the immediate


change that Sagan calls for will necessarily meet with resistance. Sagan?s own


?revelation? about mankind?s reticence to act unless literally ?under


the gun? remains a valid point. Destruction of the ozone layer and incidents


such as the Exxon oil spill in Alaska are indeed enormous calamities, and we


have been cautioned by at least one reputable scientist as to the risks we take


by delaying reform, but these events are still not great enough to spawn greater


action than handling the immediate situation. It is one thing to agree that car


travel pollutes the environment, and to see dense smog in the Los Angeles Basin,


but millions will still get in their vehicles tomorrow to drive their jobs.


Current technologies available have been incorporated into lifestyle at a very


practical level. The large cogs of public and private interests also turn slowly


due to this infrastructure of product usage which has become so firmly


entrenched. Decisions that were made decades ago, such as automobile transit


phasing out train transit, and the manufacture of energy through the building of


nuclear plants, effect and influence us right now at very fundamental levels.


Just as the ozone layer will take decades to repair itself, society and public


acceptance requires time to shift and modify as well, as Sagan does well to


point out. The challenge to orchestrate the changes necessary for environmental


improvement are further complicated in at least two ways. First, there are


conflicting viewpoints as to the role government plays to influence private


industry to replace technologically damaging processes with more ecologically


sound technologies. Second, to phase out current technologies is a burden many


corporations are unwilling to take on; implementation of new technologies


adversely affects profit margins. Third, governmental failures in policy,


according to Morgensen and Eisenstodt in ?Profits are for Rape and Pillage,?


create a situation where corporations have no incentive to move towards


pollution control. Implementation of governmental governmental policies and


programs designed to improve the environment fail because there is no incentive


for legislators to determine the costs and benefits of their legislation, as


there is a lack of appropriate experience in the matter. Legislators focus only


on the appearance of implementing solutions for the popular vote, then allow


their decisions to be clouded by lobbyists and political maneuverings. The


resulting regulatory standards and technological mandates inappropriately


micromanage the private sector, limiting their creativity to allocate resources


to improve and change. Improving the environment is seen as conflicting with


growth in business, and it becomes more of a risk than an opportunity. For


example, new regulatory standards have to be met on national, rather regional


levels, and technologies are mandated without the expertise to determine their


practicality and availability. Morgenson and Eisenstodt indicate that it is


incorrect to believe that increased governmental spending and regulations are


the only solutions to the problems of a polluted planet. They call for the


government to set financial and other incentives, such as taxation and


Emission-Control Incentives (ECIs) so that producers and consumers can factor


these considerations into their decision-making processes; they then call for


the government to step away and allow the entrepreneurs and businesses that have


the proper expertise to apply the incentives. They offer examples of successful


ECI implementation in cities throughout the nation, asking why this type


methodology cannot be implemented on a grander scale. However, the immense


problem regarding the lobbying and bipartisan influences on the government


cannot be ignored. Morgenson and Eisenstodt do not provide a mechanism to


counteract this dilemma, to make way for their solution. Neither do they offer


an explanation as to how powerful governmentally-favored industries, such as the


automobile and nuclear industries, which are responsible for large amounts of


pollution would suddenly be open to scrutiny under Morgensen and Eisenstodt?s


system. Clearly, some sort of interim activity seems necessary to unshield these


intrinsically polluted areas. In addition, monetary incentives under Morgenson


and Eisenstodt?s ?program? take on a punitive aspect which may serve to


create a climate where cleverness is devoted towards masking the dilemma rather


than contributing to repairing the problem. Depending on the craftiness of


parties concerned, the ECI incentive system might enable a merry-go-round of


pollution-shifting within a certain region. And if the government has ?stepped


back? as Morg

ensen and Eisenstodt recommend, who is to ensure that these


policies and procedures are adhered to ? Morgensen and Eisenstodt must also


overcome an additional hurdle – convincing the government that its programs are


as ineffective as they say. The government?s environmental programs are


working well, according to EPA administrator William K. Reilly in ?The Green


Thumb of Capitalism: The Environmental Benefits of Sustainable Growth.? Solid


governmental programs have been developed for the improvement of the


environment, indicates Reilly; several situations quantify its success.


According to Reilly, the government is creating adequate market incentives to


curb pollution, encourage energy efficiency and waste reduction through low-cost


programs, in conjunction with the private sector. To his credit, Reilly cites


some powerful programs which may make at least short-term environmental and


economic success: bioremediation, telecommuting, curtailing emissions and


reusing resources. However, as Morgensen and Eisenstodt indicate, Reilly seems


to follow a predictable governmental pattern to avoid discussion of the


?favored? trucking and nuclear industries (industries with notoriously


powerful lobbying abilities, according to Morgensen and Eisenstodt), among


others. Rather, he focuses on the aftermath of the Exxon-Valdez cleanup


catastrophe. It is not only curious that a catastrophe could be listed as a


success in the larger scheme of environmental issues, it also does not address


the aspect of making a corporation more accountable for its failures, or even


discuss what changes have been made in the oil industry to prevent such


catastrophes from occurring again. Additionally, the idea that accounting for


the ?national well-being? be measured by some other bean-counting system


besides the GNP and NNP really avoids considerations of common sense. For


example, if discontinuing usage of CFCs will enable the restoration of the ozone


layer, it follows that proper policy-making would include the discontinuance of


CFCs. Bean-counting does not provide for this logical relationship. Reilly


espouses the thought that capitalism is not a threat to the environment; he


indicates that its mechanisms actually encourage decisions that respect


environmental values. He evidences that the situation in the United States is


exemplary in comparison to third-world counties in South America and in the


former USSR. These are interesting observations, but they do not counter the


observation made by Barry Commoner in ?Economic Growth and Environmental


Quality: How to Have Both.? Commoner points out that nearly all of the postwar


technologies which have caused large-scale pollution were developed and put into


use in the capitalist countries first; then, driven by profit maximization and


market domination, these same technologies were sold to socialist countries.


Intrinsic greed of the capitalism system is really then more of a threat to the


environment than other political systems. Commoner would agree with Morgensen/Eisenstodt


and Reilly that economic growth and a cleaner environment are not mutually


exclusive. The question of how to improve the environment while still enabling


balanced or sustained economic growth, remains. Commoner indicates that this


balance is possible, if we carefully plan ways to use available technology to


spur economic growth and solve ecological problems at the same time. He


indicates that the current method of controlling emissions of toxic substances


antagonizes incorrect beliefs that ecology and economy and mutually exclusive


elements. He shows that the main reason for an increase in pollution is due to


postwar changes in the technology of production. For example, our refuse piles


have dramatically increased due to an increase in disposable goods, synthetic


products are used in place of natural, decomposable ones, and the amount of


energy and fuel has increased dramatically to produce goods. A shift towards


decomposable goods would continue economic growth, be decrease garbage growth.


Commoner indicates that as time passes, an increasing amount of capital will be


spent on fuel and energy to produce goods. Commoner explains that it is a


long-term incentive to find alternative sources of fuel, such as sunlight, that


will not deplete at the rate fossil fuels do, and after an initial investment,


take very little monetary capital to maintain. Commoner suggests that this move


must go hand-in-hand with current technology, in part because technology depends


on its successful integration into the existing system. It also is important to


achieve integration among major economic sectors, such as agriculture, auto


manufacturing, and the oil industry. If changing technology is incorporated into


current production methodologies, large capital expenditures can be minimized or


folded into the overall business plan in a sensible way. How to properly change


the way that industrial decisions are made, especially by the ?sacred cow?


of auto manufacturing, is not clear. Commoner recommends that an investment


policy which is social rather than under private control should be implemented.


The policy-makers would choose the technology to be used to produce goods. This


suggests that many more individuals could assess whether a technology was


actually useful or moral to society. However, this would be improbable in terms


of actual implementation in at least four ways. First, although the U.S. can be


said to be a distinct form of socialized capitalism, the Commoner?s procedure


would most likely illicit outrage in terms of its invasiveness of the


corporation. Additionally, the recommendation could be ignored by other


countries because there is no enforcement mechanism. Second, even if


Commoner?s recommendations were well-received, there is a problem with


technology selection in that there will be cases where an apparently benign


technology will be embraced, only to find out that it is harmful in some way.


Sagan?s example of CPC?s is a case in point. Third, if the plan was


implemented, the question remains as to who would decide on the technologies,


and what mechanism would ensure that these persons would not be influenced by


some lobbying power. Fourth, the reality exists that some companies would be


unable to afford the costs of transforming to the designated technology.


Commoner offers the suggestion that the money that is used to fund war and


preparation for war should be funneled towards the transformation. How this


would be practically implemented is not apparent. It is apparent, however, that


some policy consistent with the goals of decreasing pollutants and economic


growth must be forthcoming. If we do not implement sound strategies


incorporating these two facets together, perhaps economic concerns will become


secondary, as Carl Sagan believes they now are.

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