The Insignificance of Thresholds in Environmental Impact Assessment: An Illustrative Case Study in Canada

Environmental assessment is the process that decision-makers rely on to predict, evaluate, and prevent biophysical, social, and economic impacts of potential project developments. The determination of significance in environmental assessment is central to environmental management in many nations. We...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental management (New York) 2018-06, Vol.61 (6), p.1062-1071
Hauptverfasser: Murray, Cathryn Clarke, Wong, Janson, Singh, Gerald G., Mach, Megan, Lerner, Jackie, Ranieri, Bernardo, Peterson St-Laurent, Guillaume, Guimaraes, Alice, Chan, Kai M. A.
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container_end_page 1071
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1062
container_title Environmental management (New York)
container_volume 61
creator Murray, Cathryn Clarke
Wong, Janson
Singh, Gerald G.
Mach, Megan
Lerner, Jackie
Ranieri, Bernardo
Peterson St-Laurent, Guillaume
Guimaraes, Alice
Chan, Kai M. A.
description Environmental assessment is the process that decision-makers rely on to predict, evaluate, and prevent biophysical, social, and economic impacts of potential project developments. The determination of significance in environmental assessment is central to environmental management in many nations. We reviewed ten recent environmental impact assessments from British Columbia, Canada and systematically reviewed and scored significance determination and the approaches used by assessors, the use of thresholds in significance determination, threshold exceedances, and the outcomes. Findings of significant impacts were exceedingly rare and practitioners used a combination of significance determination approaches, most commonly relying upon reasoned argumentation. Quantitative thresholds were rarely employed, with less than 10% of the valued components evaluated using thresholds. Even where quantitative thresholds for significance were exceeded, in every case practitioners used a variety of rationales to demote negative impacts to non-significance. These reasons include combinations of scale (temporal and spatial) of impacts, an already exceeded baseline, model uncertainty and/or substituting less stringent thresholds. Governments and agencies can better protect resources by requiring clear and defensible significance determinations, by making government-defined thresholds legally enforceable and accountable, and by requiring or encouraging significance determination through inclusive and collaborative approaches.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00267-018-1025-6
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subjects Aquatic Pollution
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Economic impact
Environment
Environmental assessment
Environmental impact
Environmental impact assessment
Environmental Management
Forestry Management
Nature Conservation
Reviews
Thresholds
Waste Water Technology
Water Management
Water Pollution Control
title The Insignificance of Thresholds in Environmental Impact Assessment: An Illustrative Case Study in Canada
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