edited by Gretta Goldenman Oppenheimer Wolff & Donnelly, Brussels, Belgium; Member of California Bar Series: INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW AND POLICY Many state-owned enterprises in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) are saddled with severe environmental problems due to the failure of the centrally planned economies to control industrial pollution. Today, privatization programs -- a key component in building modern market economies in CEE countries -- are transferring enterprises into private hands, on an unprecedented scale. Uncertainty about responsibility for the environmental problems has emerged as a significant constraint to privatization or independent management, particularly with regard to contamination left over from past industrial activities, and unacceptable levels of pollution from ongoing operations.
This book describes the laws of CEE countries applicable to the transfer of contaminated property; how individual enterprises are privatized in CEE; the methods used by investors to contain the legal risks of acquiring property with environmental problems, including contractual safeguards; and the policy options for addressing the environment-related concerns of investors interested in CEE properties undergoing privatization. The book analyses the laws of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic concerning privatization, property transfer, and environmental liability; legal issues arising in the transfer of contaminated properties from an investor's point of view; and Central European policy and legislative initiatives to address environmental problems during privatization. It is argued that directing economies and administrative resources towards the control of ongoing pollution can accomplish more at this time than a focus on cleanup of past pollution. While excessive hazards to health clearly need to be addressed, the best strategy for past pollution may be not to clean up now but to take only those urgent steps necessary to prevent (further) harm to human health.
This would keep the focus on prevention of further damage. Inappropriate integration of environmental concerns in privatization and economic transformation could cause unacceptable delays. The issue is how to avoid being distracted by ad hoc demands in individual privatization deals, so that privatization can be kept on track and environmental priorities set on the basis of each country's most urgent needs. Graham & Trotman/Martinus Nijhoff September 1994 346 pp. Hardbound Dfl.170.00 BrP.55.00
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Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Research
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Illustrationen
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ISBN-13
978-1-85966-094-2 (9781859660942)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
<ol class=copymedium>Preface. Warsaw Conference. Executive Summary. Part I: I. Introduction. II. Environmental Liability in Central and Eastern Europe: The Legal Issues. III. Economic Impacts of Environmental Problems on Privatization in Central and Eastern Europe. IV. Privatization of Enterprises with Environmental Problems. V. The Role of Liability in Environmental Cleanups in Other Countries. VI. Containing the Costs(I): How Foreign Investors Manage Environmental Problems During Property Transfer. VII. Containing the Costs (II): Government Options for Dealing with Enterprise-Related Environmental Problems in Privatization. Part II: VIII. Capital Privatization and the Management of Environmental Liability Issues in Poland; (R. Greenspan Bell/T. Kojala.) IX. Legislating on Environmental Liability in Privatization: A Hungarian Example; (A. Sajó.) X. Due Diligence and Other Means of Coping with Environmental Risks in Privatization Transactions: The Point of View of the Private Investor; (T.T. Smith Jr.) XI. Assessment of the Hungarian Legal Approach; (A. Sajó.) XII. Environmental Liability in Property Transfer in Poland; (S. Wajda, J. Sommer.) XIII. Privatization and Environmental Liability: Assessment of the Laws and Policies of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic; (P. Tillinghast.) Glossary. Index.</ol>