What is it about?

There is a widely held view that in the period since the early 1990s the European Union (EU) has overtaken the United States (US) as the leader with the most advanced or demanding environmental regulations. However, it is striking that there are very few robust comparative evaluations of the outcomes of environmental regulations or of levels of industrial environmental performance in the EU and US. This paper seeks to address this by comparing the standards and levels of performance achieved based on a case study of the regulation of a classic air pollutant (benzene) from a widespread industrial sector that has been heavily regulated in both settings for many years (oil refineries). Contrary to expectations, we find that on average normalised levels of emissions from EU refineries are three times higher than those from US refineries, and whilst outcomes in the US show marked convergence towards the best standards, there continue to be wide variations in the outcomes achieved in different EU Member States, despite the rhetoric of harmonisation.

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Why is it important?

Offers empirical evidence regarding whether the EU and its Member States are leading when it comes to refinery benzene emissions.

Perspectives

Highlights • Long running debate but limited comparative evidence on environmental regulation in the EU and US. • Comparison of emissions of a classic air pollutant (benzene) from a heavily regulated sector (oil refineries). • Emissions from EU refineries are three times higher than those from US refineries. • Unlike in the EU, US refineries show marked convergence towards the best standards. • Our findings contradict the prevailing rhetoric of the EU as an environmental leader.

Dr Stavros Afionis
Cardiff University

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This page is a summary of: Environmental leadership? Comparing regulatory outcomes and industrial performance in the United States and the European Union, Journal of Cleaner Production, August 2015, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2015.03.029.
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