In January 1996, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a policy statement endorsing effluent trading in watersheds, hoping to spur additional interest in the subject. The policy describes five types of effluent trades - point source/point source, point source/nonpoint source, pretreatment, intraplant, and nonpoint source/nonpoint source. This report evaluates the feasibility of effluent trading for facilities in the oil and gas industry (exploration and production, refining, and distribution and marketing segments), electric power industry, and the coal industry (mines and preparation plants). Nonpoint source/nonpoint source trades are not considered since the energy industry facilities evaluated here are all point sources...
This report briefly discusses the extent to which emissions trading has been used in the United Stat...
Abstract: The use of transferable discharge permits in water pollution, what we will call water qual...
Since 1977, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been developing and implementing an increa...
In January 1996, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a policy statement endorsin...
The 1990s have been characterized as the decade of market incentives in U.S. environmental policy-ma...
Watershed based trading or effluent trading, allows pollution sources to buy controls that will redu...
Effluent trading programs (ETPs) have been proposed as cost-effective alternatives to command-and-co...
This paper focuses on the benefits of emissions trading as an alternative method of air pollution co...
Across all types of water quality trading, only 100 point source facilities have participated in tra...
From the time that EPA introduced the offset program for new sources of air emissions in 1976, numer...
This paper provides a systematic overview of water quality trading in the U.S. The primary source of...
Abstract: Pollution permit trading programs typically focus on individual pollutants, yet many envir...
In programs for trading pollution abatement between point and nonpoint sources, the trading ratio sp...
Handling produced water in an economical and environmentally sound manner is vital to coalbed methan...
After much debate and many legislative proposals, the Clean Air Act was amended in 1990 to allow mor...
This report briefly discusses the extent to which emissions trading has been used in the United Stat...
Abstract: The use of transferable discharge permits in water pollution, what we will call water qual...
Since 1977, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been developing and implementing an increa...
In January 1996, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a policy statement endorsin...
The 1990s have been characterized as the decade of market incentives in U.S. environmental policy-ma...
Watershed based trading or effluent trading, allows pollution sources to buy controls that will redu...
Effluent trading programs (ETPs) have been proposed as cost-effective alternatives to command-and-co...
This paper focuses on the benefits of emissions trading as an alternative method of air pollution co...
Across all types of water quality trading, only 100 point source facilities have participated in tra...
From the time that EPA introduced the offset program for new sources of air emissions in 1976, numer...
This paper provides a systematic overview of water quality trading in the U.S. The primary source of...
Abstract: Pollution permit trading programs typically focus on individual pollutants, yet many envir...
In programs for trading pollution abatement between point and nonpoint sources, the trading ratio sp...
Handling produced water in an economical and environmentally sound manner is vital to coalbed methan...
After much debate and many legislative proposals, the Clean Air Act was amended in 1990 to allow mor...
This report briefly discusses the extent to which emissions trading has been used in the United Stat...
Abstract: The use of transferable discharge permits in water pollution, what we will call water qual...
Since 1977, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been developing and implementing an increa...