39,372 research outputs found
The impact of eco-innovation, remediation liabilities of government, and sustainable environmental on soil pollution in China
Traditionally, laws regarding soil pollution were limited in China.
However, due to rapid industrialization and urbanization, soil pollution
has become a major environmental issue. Thereby, in order
to address the emerging threat, different measures have been
introduced and implemented by Chinese government. The paper,
in this regard, examines the role of government measures to
reduce soil pollution, eco-innovation, and environmental sustainability
on soil pollution in China. secondary data from the World
Development Indicators (WDI), Chinese Soil Database, the global
economy, and the environmental performance index (EPI) has
been collected from 1985 to 2020. Autoregressive distributed lag
model is used in the study to check the relationship among constructs.
Findings reveal that government expenditures to reduce
soil pollution, eco-innovation, and environmental sustainability
have a negative association with soil pollution in China. The
results also revealed that industrialization and population growth
have a positive linkage with soil pollution in China. Having these
evidences, the study recommends that fiscal policies should be
formulated to increase the budget for soil reduction projects so it
can save soil from pollution. Likewise, policymakers must behave
to encourage eco-innovation at economic and societal levels to
reduce soil pollution
Emergency situations in soil pollution by animal wastes
The analysed indices were identical during the entire research period, and so were the measurement methods
used in the laboratory (pH, total humus, total nitrogen, mobile phosphorus, potassium). The evolution of the
soil pollution by animal wastes from the farm animals in the Arad area point out a high level of soil pollution
because of the low values of the pH, of the low soil bonitation scores, of the secondary compaction in the
first genetic horizon. After a poultry farms ceases to operate, soil pollution persists, with a slight tendency to decrease naturally
Soil Pollution Prevention and Remediation
1DICATECh, Polytechnic University of Bari, Via Orabona 4, 70125 Bari, Italy 2Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Davis, 3105 Ghausi Hall, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA 3School of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Crete, 73100 Chania, Greece 4Dipartimento di Ingegneria Strutturale, Edile e Geotecnica, Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi 24, 10129 Torino, Ital
Reap What You Sow: Soil Pollution Remediation Reform in China
As China undergoes the fastest economic development in the history of the world, so too has its environmental problems shattered all precedents. While China’s leaders recognize they must change course, environmental concerns have long taken a back seat to economic development. Soil pollution is destroying China’s environment, affecting public health, and reducing the country’s food supply. Soil pollution slows China’s economic development, preventing land development in urban centers. Soil pollution also threatens China’s social stability because it has inspired marginalized groups to organize in protest of environmental conditions. Environmental remediation, or the obligations of a facility or the government to clean up land contaminates, is essential in China. But China’s environmental remediation laws are ambiguous, poorly enforced, and often entirely unobserved. In order to respond to these challenges, the central government needs to develop a remediation scheme that: 1) requires strict liability to remediate soil pollution with appropriate exceptions; 2) evaluates the degree of remediation needed for a particular site; 3) utilizes the cadre system’s promotion targets to ensure enforcement; and 4) promotes more public transparency to relieve the public’s anxiety. These changes will serve both environmental and economic interests
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