Document Type

Working Paper

Publication Date

6-7-2004

SSRN Discipline

PSN Subject Matter eJournals; LSN Subject Matter eJournals; ERN Subject Matter eJournals; SEIN Subject Matter eJournals (Merging with CGN); Health Economics Network; Sustainability Research & Policy Network; delete2; CGN Subject Matter eJournals; Economics Research Network; Legal Scholarship Network; Public Choice & Political Economy eJournals; Law School Research Papers - Legal Studies; Corporate Governance Network; Administrative Law eJournals; SRPN Subject Matter eJournals; Law School Research Papers - Public Law & Legal Theory; Political Institutions eJournals; Political Science Network; Environmental & Natural Resources Law eJournals

Abstract

The Clean Water Act is at a critical juncture today New policies new approaches may soon be adopted before we have had an adequate opportunity to assess how well the old techniques have worked We need to determine as accurately as possible what has worked and what has failed as we approach the question of change Although the Act stands in need of revision to fill various gaps in coverage the aspects of the Act that are prime candidates for reform are not always the ones the critics target The CWA in fact has been remarkably successful in doing what it was designed to doThe application of technologybased effluent limitations through the permit system has proven to have been a wise approach for the initial control of point sources Together with the funding of thousands of municipal wastewater treatment facilities the technologybased approach has produced remarkable reductions in both municipal and industrial pollution The CWA has proven successful in other ways as well The rate at which wetlands are lost has declined some 90 percent since the early 1970s and the amount of oil spilled annually into our waters has fallen to onetenth of the level that prevailed during the 1970s All of this was done without causing harm to the economy or to our international competitiveness In fact the cost of complying with the Act has been lower than the EPA anticipated and eleven of our largest trading partners actually spend more per capita on controlling water pollution than we do The economic benefits produced by the Act moreover appear greater than many had assumed The Act and its success stand as a testament to the vision insight and courage of its drafters Unfortunately but not suprisingly given the limits of human and political capacity neither the design nor its implementation have been perfect

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