Water Pollution Abatement by Chinese Industry: Cost Estimates and Policy Implications

Water Pollution Abatement by Chinese Industry: Cost Estimates and Policy Implications

Author: 
Dasgupta, Susmita
Place: 
Washington, D. C.
Publisher: 
World Bank Group
Date published: 
1996
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Wheeler, David, jt. author
Huq, Mainul, jt. author
Zhang, Chongh, jt. author
Abstract: 

Data on pollution abatement costs in Chinese industry suggest that the benefits of stricter discharge standards should be weighed carefully against the costs. China's current regulatory system provides an economic incentive to abate by charging a levy on pollution that exceeds the standard. But changing to a full emissions charge system would greatly reduce total abatement costs. Using factory-level data provided by China's National Environmental Protection Agency (NEPA) and the Tianjin Environmental Protection Bureau, Dasgupta, Huq, Wheeler, and Zhang estimate the costs of water pollution abatement for Chinese industry. Using their econometric results, they analyze the cost-effectiveness of current pollution control policy in China -- and conclude that: ° For each pollutant, marginal abatement costs exhibit great differences by sector, scale, and degree of abatement. Ratios of 20:1 in each dimension are not uncommon. ° The benefits of stricter discharge standards should be weighed carefully against the costs. For a sample of 260 factories, a shift across the existing range of standards entails a present value difference in abatement costs of $330 million. ° Emissions charges as low as $1 a ton would be sufficient to induce 80 percent abatement of suspended solids for cost-minimizing factories. Charges of $3 a ton, $15 a ton, and $30 a ton would be sufficient to induce 90 percent abatement of suspended solids, chemical oxygen demand, and biological oxygen demand, respectively. ° The current regulatory system provides an economic incentive to abate by charging a levy on pollution that exceeds the standard. But the results of this analysis suggest that changing to a full emissions charge system would greatly reduce overall abatement costs. For the sample of 260 factories, the current overall abatement rate could be attained under a charge system with present...

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CITATION: Dasgupta, Susmita. Water Pollution Abatement by Chinese Industry: Cost Estimates and Policy Implications . Washington, D. C. : World Bank Group , 1996. - Available at: http://library.au.int/water-pollution-abatement-chinese-industry-cost-estimates-and-policy-implications