Oil Pollution Prevention and Enforcement Measures and Their Effectiveness: A Survey of Empirical Research
27 Pages Posted: 7 Aug 2006
Date Written: July 2004
Abstract
This paper reviews the empirical research on the effectiveness of oil pollution prevention and enforcement measures in the United States. I consider both "prevention" or "monitoring" activities such as government inspections, and "enforcement" activities such as sanctions, remedial actions, and other mechanisms designed to punish and/or bring a firm into compliance to reduce the frequency and/or size of spills. Over the past 20 years, there have been a series of independent studies by academic researchers analyzing Coast Guard and oil spill data with the goal of determining the effectiveness of alternative monitoring, enforcement and penalty policies. While the overwhelming finding from these studies is that enforcement efforts reduce oil spills, questions abound about the proper mix of enforcement techniques and whether the costs of more enforcement would exceed the benefits.
Keywords: oil spills, enforcement, environmental regulation, monitoring
JEL Classification: D62, H41, Q58
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation