Rivers aren't
supposed to be opaque and white, right? The local river in Aodi,
Zhejiang seems to have missed the memo, and it's not alone. In fact,
it is the third river in
China to have turned white in a month. In addition, the river
in Chongqing turned red and Jiaxing has found an orange river from
excess iron. Resident reactions range from anger at the business that
caused the color change in the cases where the cause is known to
confusion to bottling of the water to show off the colors to one
fisherman going about his business as if the river turning read made
no difference to him. Assuming that fish were still to be found in
the river (unlikely, though possible if this were the first morning
of the river being red,) it probably didn't make much difference-yet.
From "normal" pollutants to corpses, all sorts of things
have been reported in China's rivers, and the rather varied pollution
doesn't seem to be slowing.
Why should it? The
companies which are dumping white rock-dust or dyes or latex waste or
iron ions have no economic incentive strong enough to make them clean
their waste well enough to prevent this sort of event. The total
costs of pollution are not paid completely by the companies doing the
polluting, or even mostly by them in many cases. With much of the
cost being paid by local residents who can not use the water to wash
their clothes, water their fields, water their livestock, or drink
themselves (even after the
boiling that is needed to drink even unpolluted water in most of
China,) there is little balance in who gains and who loses. The
corporations which are dumping pollutants into the rivers are not
paying much to do so (certainly less than it would cost to treat the
water first, or else they would,) and the locals gain far less
benefit from the corporate profits than the harm caused by inability
to clean themselves or have water to drink.
This sort of externality is a large problem in pollution and climate
change. If a corporation can make a cost external, they have no
reason not to do so, and then the people paying the cost are not the
corporation, profits are increased by the decreased costs, and people
suffer. Rich countries send factories to poorer and developing
countries, externalizing many of the pollution-based costs for
themselves but causing the poorer countries to foot these costs,
further increasing inequality.
No
one wants to pay the price of slowing economic growth to help the
environment, and no one wants to pay the price of pollution in their
back yards to keep the economy running in the way it has been, and so
we find that the richest keep the growth moving and externalize as
many costs as possible to the poorest, often ignoring the cyclic
effect of the economy leading to climate changes that affect poorer
parts of the world more that then increase economic inequality,
increasing environmental damage to the world that is still
concentrated in the poorer areas. This matches quite well with the
idea that environmental regulations and the costs of pollution
abatement have more effect on industries that create more pollution
and which are easier to move to new locations- the industries causing
this sort of extreme pollution are concentrated in developing nations
and are of types that are largely leaving developed nations.
Inequality, local pollution issues, climate change, and the
differences between environmental protection regulations in different
locations seem to be highly interrelated, and when industry,
developing nations, and villages where the locals have fewer personal
resources combine, we get rivers turning white and demands from the
local residents that the industry in question be shut down. Most
likely, these demands will go unheeded, as corporations typically
hold more sway than individuals.
Beginning of this
book: http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/climate-injustice
FOOTLOOSE
AND POLLUTION-FREE Josh
Ederington, Arik Levinson, and Jenny Minier*
Sweden solved the same problem — inexpensively — simply by requiring all factories to discharge their waste water (and any other wastes) somewhere directly upstream of wherever the factory got whatever water it used. This made it become in every factory owner's interest to clean up the factory's own messes in-house — instead of dumping those messes on other citizens
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