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Corporate And National Responsibility Towards Pollution
Corporate And National Responsibility Towards Pollution
Corporate And National Responsibility Towards Pollution by
Global warming is becoming a major concern of business leaders,
families, politicians and just about everyone else. The remarkable
growth in world population and national economies has fed into the
environment lots of toxic gases that are beginning to change the
environment in which we live. This environment is beginning to
cause serious climatic changes.
Corporations have a responsibility to clean the environment after
they have damaged it. They also have a responsibility to ensure
that they are not damaging their operations while they continuing
on with their operations. The problem is that American and European
companies are being held to a different standard than companies of
other nations.
Dupont was ordered this week to pay 196 million dollars to clean up
property at its old facilities in West Virginia. According to
prosecutors the company had dumped heavy metals into the
environment, which is causing not only health problems for local
residents but also contaminating the soil around the plant and
area. It is doubtful that the same would happen in many other
nations.
Companies in other countries like China and the Asiatic areas would
not be required to pay such damages and engage in such rigorous
clean up activities. Their health and safety standards are lower
then in most European nations and their labor costs are much lower
as well. To add to their advantage we can also say that governments
support these businesses with lower tax rates giving them many
advantages the European and American’s are having a hard time
dealing with.
This doesn’t mean that European nations should relax
restrictions on environmental damage in their areas but that they
should hold Asian countries more responsible for their own
environments. The pollution in America and China will likely have a
reciprocal affect on the entire world environment and such
pollution doesn’t stay local. Therefore new international
standards should be formed and dealt with.
People may then wonder, “How would countries like the U.S.
control the environments of China?” They do so by adding
environmental import tax on all products that come from these
environmentally hazardous societies. This import tax will calculate
the cost of environmental problems and add it to the product that
will make American products more desirable.
America is the world’s largest importer and has control of a
lot of markets. We have been pushing to get into China so we have
learned to play “hard ball” because the majority of our
manufactured goods are more expensive. Therefore, each time we open
an opportunity for our products more Chinese products flood our
markets. It is like a person trying to canoe up stream.
Both politicians and businesses are becoming concerned with the
environment. A group of around 25 major corporations solicited
president Bush to raise the pollution standards in fear that a
major environmental collapse could happen in the next two decades.
The Bush Administration made brief comments about the topic but
didn’t seem overly concerned. When businesses begin to
recognize the danger and are willing to pay for it the rest of us
should listen with open ears.
Murad Ali is a three time published book author, a labor relations
professional, a part-time professor in business management and the
owner of http://www.thenewbusinessworld.blogspot.com and
http://www.blogpublishingandmarketing.com
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