Part 1 of this article is in  archives, here:

#789 -- Answering Critiques of Precaution, Part 1, April 15, 2004  
http://infoarchive.net/sgroup/BIOFUEL/33627/

-------

http://www.rachel.org/bulletin/index.cfm?issue_ID=2432

#790 -- Answering the Critics of Precaution, Part 2, April 29, 2004  

Last issue we began answering some of the criticisms of the 
precautionary principle. Of course, ours are not the only possible 
answers.

The precautionary principle is a new way of making decisions, and it 
is slowly replacing the "old way." Here is an example of how the "old 
way" worked: someone develops a new chemical for cleaning 
refrigerators. They do a "risk assessment" on that chemical and 
determine that it will only cause "acceptable" harm to humans and the 
environment. They commercialize the chemical, create a "need" for it 
by advertising, and rake in the money. They have strong incentives 
not to study the effects of their chemical, so the first signs of 
trouble are reported by citizens, and those early reports are 
ridiculed, denied and labeled "junk science." After a couple of 
decades, the chemical manufacturer (without ever admitting that the 
citizens were right) introduces a new refrigerator-cleaning chemical 
that they say is a big improvement and will only cause "acceptable" 
harm. Their risk assessment proves it. The merry-go-round continues.

The precautionary principle begins by asking, "What's the goal?" 
Answer: Clean refrigerators. "What's the least-damaging way to reach 
the goal?" This leads to an examination of alternative ways of 
cleaning refrigerators and a search for the least-harmful way 
(including, probably, vinegar-and-water or perhaps soap-and-water). 
The overarching goal isn't to inflict "acceptable" damage on humans 
and the environment -- the main goal is to avoid harm to the extent 
that we can. Once the least-harmful way has been selected, monitoring 
continues in case the decision was flawed (always a possibility).

So here are more answers to some of the criticisms of precaution:

Criticism #7: The precautionary principle is based on values and 
emotions and not on science.

Response #7: Everything we do is based on values. Of course the 
precautionary principle is based on values, but so is the old way -- 
the two approaches just emphasize different values.

The precautionary principle makes one set of values explicit -- 
protecting humans and ecosystems -- and puts that out front. Under 
the "old way" we try to hide our values behind "science," using 
scientific uncertainty as a cover for valuing short-term, private 
gain and ignoring the long-term and public/environmental consequences 
of our actions.

Even science starts with values. Scientific inquiry always begins by 
asking a question, and the questions that scientists choose to ask 
arise from particular values, particular assumptions about what is 
important.[1] So with science and precaution, as with all of life -- 
values come first.[2] There is nothing wrong with this. Indeed, there 
is no way to escape it. Making values explicit helps people 
understand what's really going on, and clarifies our choices as 
citizens.

Advocates of the precautionary principle definitely don't turn their 
backs on science, But they also don't turn their backs on other kinds 
of knowledge. Science is not the only valid way of knowing about the 
world; other kinds of knowledge can be useful to decision-makers -- 
historical knowledge, business knowledge, spiritual knowledge, local 
knowledge, community preferences, cultural values, artistic 
perceptions, and so on, can all play a valuable role in informing 
decision-makers.

Science cannot tell us what's best for society. Scientific experts 
can provide valuable information, but when it comes to setting 
political goals and making public policies, scientists have no 
special expertise. As the European Environment Agency has said, 
"Science should be on tap, not on top." We citizens should decide 
what we really want (our goals), take all available scientific 
information into account, take all the other relevant information 
into account, then do our best to become wise decision-makers.

Who are wise decision-makers?

** Those who are willing to monitor the consequences of their 
decision, to try to learn from past choices;[3]

** who are willing to revisit past decisions periodically, update 
their assessments, and modify policies accordingly;

** who favor decisions that can be reversed if things start to go sour;

** who experiment and try to learn before making a full-scale 
commitment down an unknown path;

** who consider all available alternatives, considering both costs 
and benefits before proceeding;

** who involve affected parties in decisions from the earliest stages 
when questions are being asked and goals set;

** who consider intergenerational equity in all decisions, asking 
whether we are saddling future generations with costs (or diminished 
opportunities) that we ourselves should be bearing;

** who ask whether justice and fairness are enhanced by the decision;

** who ask whether the decision will increase or decrease 
inequalities within and between communities;

** who ask what effect the decision will have on the most vulnerable 
and least capable among us.

Criticism #8: The precautionary principle envisions a new role for 
government, one without precedent or legitimacy.

Response #8: On the contrary, government has an ancient legal 
obligation to take precautionary action, to protect the public trust.

The Public Trust Doctrine is a legal doctrine handed down to us from 
Roman law, through English law, into the law of the 13 original 
colonies and now the states.[4]

The public trust doctrine asserts that the sovereign (in our case, 
state government) has an inalienable duty (a duty that cannot be 
denied or given away) to protect the common wealth --air, water, 
wildlife, public health, our genetic heritage, and more -- which we 
all inherit and own together and none of us owns individually.[4]

As trustee, government must protect the trust assets (nature and 
human health) for the trust beneficiaries (present and future 
generations). Government even has a duty to protect the trust assets 
against harmful actions by the beneficiaries themselves, and so from 
time to time government must limit some of the prerogatives of 
private property in order to protect the common wealth for present 
and future generations.

In carrying out its duty to protect the public trust, government has 
a duty to anticipate harm, to look ahead to protect the trust against 
impending threats.[5] If government waits until harm can be 
demonstrated beyond doubt, then it will be too late -- the trust 
property will be damaged and government will have failed in its duty 
as trustee.

The precautionary principle provides a way for government to fulfill 
its responsibility to protect the public trust, to anticipate and 
avoid harm, to foresee and forestall.

Criticism #9: Risk assessments rely on conservative assumptions and 
so they embody all the "precaution" we need.

Response #9: Risk assessments typically examine only a single option, 
not a range of alternatives. Therefore, risk assessments don't ask 
the basic precautionary question, "How can we minimize harm while 
achieving our goal?"

Because basic data are often not available about environment and 
health risks, risk assessors substitute best professional judgments 
and estimates. Furthermore, risk assessments try to compensate for 
unknowns and unknowables by applying "uncertainty factors" of 10 or 
100 or 1000. As a result, two equally qualified risk assessors 
working with the same basic data can reach vastly different 
conclusions about risk.[6] Peer review of risk assessments by all 
stakeholders can reduce the range of disagreement, but it remains 
true that the assessment of risks can vary greatly, depending upon 
who is doing the risk assessment. As the first administrator of U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, William Ruckelshaus, said in 1984: 
"We should remember that risk assessment data can be like the 
captured spy: If you torture it long enough, it will tell you 
anything you want to know."[7]

Therefore, a risk assessment of a single option is not precautionary. 
Indeed, risk assessments are often used merely to argue that a 
certain amount of harm is justifiable, not to learn how much harm is 
avoidable.

Furthermore, instead of accepting that the burden of producing needed 
information falls on the party who is seeking to impose risks on 
society, risk assessors often try to make up for the lack of basic 
data by applying "uncertainty factors," as if guesswork could 
adequately substitute for real knowledge. This is not precautionary 
in any sense of the word.

Risk assessment might play a role in a precautionary decision process 
by assessing the risks -- and the benefits -- of all available 
alternatives. The work of risk assessors could then be considered, 
along with many other factors, in the decision.

Criticism #10: Precaution requires proof of safety, which is impossible.

Response #10: Precaution does not require proof of safety -- it 
requires that the creator of risks shall make a best effort to 
acquire the information needed to assess the possible harms from the 
activity -- an effort that is open and subject to peer review by all 
affected parties. It requires acceptance of the community's stake in 
the outcome. It requires a commitment to ongoing monitoring and open 
reporting as the activity unfolds, and agreeing to pay for any harm 
that ensues, and taking responsibility for remediation as needed.

But there is still no guarantee that any particular firm will be able 
to make good on the financial commitment inherent in "agreeing to pay 
for any harm that ensues, and taking responsibility for remediation 
as needed." If the Superfund program teaches us anything, it teaches 
us that even large firms claim that they cannot afford to remediate 
the problems they have created.

To deter fly-by-night firms, and to institutionalize the principle 
that "the polluter shall pay," ecological economist Robert Costanza 
has proposed a "precautionary principle polluter pays" (4P) assurance 
bond.[8, pgs. 209-215.] Using the "4P" approach, before a new 
technology, process or chemical could be introduced, the worst-case 
harm would be estimated in dollar terms. Then the proponent of the 
new activity would be required to post a bond for the full amount 
before startup.

Such "assurance bonds" are common in the construction industry today, 
to assure that a job will be completed on schedule and they are 
intended to keep "fly by night" firms out of the construction 
business where they might cut corners and endanger public health.

A "4P" bond effectively shifts the burden of proof onto the proponent 
- the burden of producing information to show that the activity is 
less harmful than was initially assumed (or, if harm becomes evident, 
to pay restitution by forfeiting a portion of the bond). A "4P" bond 
would also give the proponent powerful financial incentives to reduce 
the worst case damages by, for example, adopting intrinsically safer 
alternatives.

Criticism #11: We don't need this new way of doing things because 
we're doing better than our predecessors did. We're even doing better 
than we ourselves did last year. We have new technologies that won't 
pollute as much as the old technologies polluted.

Response #11: The question isn't whether you are doing better than 
your predecessors, or better than you did last year. The question is, 
are you doing the best you can to protect human health and the 
environment? The precautionary approach assumes you want to achieve 
your own goals, and the community's goals, by the least-harmful means 
available. Precaution provides a way to learn whether you are 
measuring up to that standard. --Peter Montague ==============

[1] David Kriebel and others, "The Precautionary Principle in 
Environmental Science," Environmental Health Perspectives Vol. 109, 
No. 9 (Sept. 2001), pgs. 871-876. Available at 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=170

[2] Nancy Myers, "The Precautionary Principle Puts Values First," 
Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society Vol. 22, No. 3 (June, 
2002), pgs. 210-219. Available at 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=188

[3] Donald Ludwig, Ray Hilborn and Carl Walters, "Uncertainty, 
Resource Exploitation, and Conservation: Lessons from History," 
Science Vol. 260 (April 2, 1993), pgs. 17, 36. Available at 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=201

[4] Peter Manus, "To a Candidate in Search of an Environmental Theme: 
Promote the Public trust," Stanford Environmental Law Journal Vol. 19 
(May 2000), pg. 315 and following pages. Available at 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=234

[5] James T. Paul, "The Public Trust Doctrine: Who Has the Burden of 
Proof?" Paper presented July, 1996 in Honolulu, Hawaii, to a meeting 
of the Western Association of Wildlife and Fisheries Administrators. 
Available at http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=190

[6] See Rachel's #420 at http://www.rachel.org/bulletin/index.cfm?issue_ID=705

[7] Ruckelshaus, W. Risk in a Free Society. Risk Analysis. 1984; 
4(3):157-162. Available at 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=361

[8] Robert Costanza and others, An Introduction to Ecological 
Economics (Boca Raton, Fla.: St. Lucie Press, 1997). The "4P" bond 
was described in Rachel's Environment & Health News #510, available 
at http://www.rachel.org/bulletin/index.cfm?issue_ID=613 . See also 
http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=310



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Ink Cartridges or Refill Kits for your HP, Epson, Canon or Lexmark
Printer at MyInks.com.  Free s/h on orders $50 or more to the US & Canada.
http://www.c1tracking.com/l.asp?cid=5511
http://us.click.yahoo.com/mOAaAA/3exGAA/qnsNAA/FGYolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://infoarchive.net/sgroup/biofuel/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/biofuel/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to