The messy politics of cleaning up

By Jonathan Adler
Copyright 1999 Washington Times
January 10, 1999



It is an article of faith among many environmental activists that modern industry has unleashed a cancer epidemic on the American people. Yet many scientists remain unconvinced, if not actively dismissive, of such fears. This gulf between activist ideology and scientific belief is one of the important issues tackled by S. Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman in their important new book, Environmental Cancer: A Political Disease? (Yale University Press, $30, 223 pages). This book presents a substantial challenge to anti-chemical activism and the largely sympathetic coverage it receives in the media.

Mr. Lichter and Mr. Rothman begin with an overview of the modern environmental movement, its history and ideological orientations. They properly note that the movement has many strains and is anything but monolithic. They also provide a handy overview of cancer, its development and causes. Environmental cancer, they note, is all cancer caused by environmental factors, including personal behavior (diet, smoking), natural exposure to carcinogens (e.g., sunlight) and exposure to man-made chemicals.

Most scientists, according to the authors, attribute only a tiny fraction of such cancers to manmade chemicals, and most of these cases are due to occupational exposures, as opposed to food additives, pesticides or pollution. Yet neither the priorities of environmental activist organizations or media coverage reflect this fact.

Mr. Lichter's and Mr. Rothman's findings surely will be controversial, but they are well documented. They polled cancer researchers to contrast the scientific consensus with the media coverage. They also used polling to identify the differences in opinion between environmental activists and cancer researchers, as well as the public at large. One interesting finding in the book is that the typical environmental activist is more supportive of federal government programs across the board than the average American citizen. It is no wonder that most environmentalists call for more federal intervention to address environmental concerns.

Environmental groups have given cancer prevention efforts a misguided focus. This book should help put public health efforts back on track.

* * *

The fear of chemical pollutants has been injected into the debate over racial injustice. The resulting brew threatens to transform environmental policy. The environmental justice movement contends that environmental contamination is disproportionately imposed on poor and minority communities. This claim has attracted substantial attention and is now incorporated into official EPA policy. While several books have addressed environmental justice concerns, The Promise and Peril of Environmental Justice (Brookings Institution Press, $22.95, 191 pages) by Christopher H. Foreman, Jr. is the first to do so with a critical eye. As a result, it is the best book to date on the subject.

Mr. Foreman, an analyst at the Brookings Institution, is clearly sympathetic to the movement's goals. Yet he fears that it may cause more harm than good. The focus on environmental justice, while understandable, is somewhat misplaced, Mr. Foreman suggests. Concerns about community empowerment and social justice are legitimate and substantial. The author argues, however, that the movement directs community attention away from those problems posing the greatest risks and therefore may actually undermine public health improvements.

Moreover, insofar as the problems environmental justice activists seek to address are social or economic in nature, federal environmental law is ill-equipped to provide a solution. If minority groups live disproportionately near environmental hazards, socio-economic factors are more to blame than racism. Thus, measures to restrict economic development in depressed areas make for an improper antidote.

Mr. Foreman adopts a measured tone and engages in thoughtful analysis of a troubling and highly controversial topic. One hopes that his critics, and there are sure to be many, are capable and willing to do the same.

* * *

The state of the world's oceans is finally attracting serious attention from mainstream environmental groups. For years, marine issues languished in the background as tragedy befell the great ocean commons. Robert Jay Wilder's Listening to the Sea: The Politics of Improving Environmental Protection (University of Pittsburgh Press, $45 cloth, $19.95 paper, 316 pages) is one of several recent books which seek to explain how the oceans began their decline and what can be done about it.

The author brings both his legal and scientific background to bear, outlining the evolution of jurisdictions from European customs to the debate over the law of the sea. This history, often overlooked in fishery discussions, is important, and Mr. Wilder provides a valuable service in supplying the background, as well as by reminding the reader that oceanic issues cannot be wholly separated from environmental concerns on land; much marine pollution, after all, is not generated at sea.

While the history and much of his analysis is insightful, the author's solutions are more of a mixed bag. He rightly notes the need for institutional reform, and a greater role for state governments in managing their coasts, but he neglects to discuss recent fishery management innovations, in New Zealand for instance, that have made significant progress. Mr. Wilder bandies about the need for a precautionary approach to environmental policy without addressing the trade-offs implicit in the argument. Saving the world's oceans requires more serious consideration than adopting the precautionary principle as a mantra.

* * *

David Lebedoff's recounting of the civil litigation spawned by the Exxon Valdez spill, Cleaning Up: The Story Behind the Greatest Legal Bonanza of Our Time (Free Press, $25, 321 pages), may be less gripping and compelling than Jonathan Harr's best seller, "A Civil Action," but the story is equally important. The sight of several million gallons of oil coating the shores of Prince William Sound in 1989 catalyzed the environmental movement. Much ink was spilled over Exxon's efforts to clean up the spill and the Sound's subsequent ecological recovery, but comparatively little attention has been paid to the private lawsuits against Exxon and Capt. Joseph Hazelwood, the man in charge of the Valdez when it ran aground.

As oil spread along the coast, lawyers spread through Alaska in search of clients. Some saw a noble cause, others an opportunity. The result was a massive class action suit on behalf of Alaska fishermen that produced a $5 billion verdict against the oil giant. Mr. Lebedoff occasionally gets mired in the minutiae of the case, and at times his language is overwrought, but the book provides a valuable behind-the-scenes look at the legal aftermath of one of the most signifigant environmental events of the past 20 years.

Jonathan H. Adler is senior director of environmental policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute and the editor of "The Costs of Kyoto: Climate Change Policy and Its Implications" (1997).

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