Elements of environmental management /:
As businesses face an increasing array of environmental challenges, including climate change, air and water pollution, and solid waste management, environmental management has become an increasingly important area of expertise. Elements of Environmental Management is an interdisciplinary textbook fo...
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Toronto ; Buffalo :
University of Toronto Press,
[2014]
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | As businesses face an increasing array of environmental challenges, including climate change, air and water pollution, and solid waste management, environmental management has become an increasingly important area of expertise. Elements of Environmental Management is an interdisciplinary textbook for students and business professionals that integrates corporate environmental strategy with environmental economics, environmental law, and environmental engineering. |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xvi, 400 pages) : illustrations |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 383-386) and index. |
ISBN: | 9781442616783 1442616784 |
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100 | 1 | |a Antweiler, Werner, |e author. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98050459 | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Elements of environmental management / |c Werner Antweiler. |
264 | 1 | |a Toronto ; |a Buffalo : |b University of Toronto Press, |c [2014] | |
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504 | |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 383-386) and index. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Print version record. | |
505 | 0 | |a 1.1. What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice criteria. | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -- 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7. Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal rights. | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping -- 6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components. | |
505 | 8 | |a 7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies. | |
505 | 8 | |a 9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2. Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply, energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 11.2.2. Management practices. | |
505 | 8 | |a 11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1. Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. Study questions. | |
520 | |a As businesses face an increasing array of environmental challenges, including climate change, air and water pollution, and solid waste management, environmental management has become an increasingly important area of expertise. Elements of Environmental Management is an interdisciplinary textbook for students and business professionals that integrates corporate environmental strategy with environmental economics, environmental law, and environmental engineering. | ||
650 | 0 | |a Industrial management |x Environmental aspects. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95010905 | |
650 | 0 | |a Strategic planning |x Environmental aspects. | |
650 | 0 | |a Business enterprises |x Environmental aspects. | |
650 | 0 | |a Environmental protection |x Economic aspects. | |
650 | 6 | |a Gestion d'entreprise |x Aspect de l'environnement. | |
650 | 6 | |a Planification stratégique |x Aspect de l'environnement. | |
650 | 6 | |a Entreprises |x Aspect de l'environnement. | |
650 | 6 | |a Environnement |x Protection |x Aspect économique. | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |x Industrial Management. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |x Management. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |x Management Science. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |x Organizational Behavior. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |x General. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Business enterprises |x Environmental aspects |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Environmental protection |x Economic aspects |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Industrial management |x Environmental aspects |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Strategic planning |x Environmental aspects |2 fast | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
DE-BY-FWS_katkey | ZDB-4-EBU-ocn891590938 |
---|---|
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Antweiler, Werner |
author_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98050459 |
author_facet | Antweiler, Werner |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Antweiler, Werner |
author_variant | w a wa |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | localFWS |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HD30 |
callnumber-raw | HD30.255 .A58 2014eb |
callnumber-search | HD30.255 .A58 2014eb |
callnumber-sort | HD 230.255 A58 42014EB |
callnumber-subject | HD - Industries, Land Use, Labor |
collection | ZDB-4-EBU |
contents | 1.1. What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice criteria. 3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -- 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7. Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal rights. 5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping -- 6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components. 7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies. 9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2. Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply, energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 11.2.2. Management practices. 11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1. Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. Study questions. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)891590938 |
dewey-full | 658.4/083 |
dewey-hundreds | 600 - Technology (Applied sciences) |
dewey-ones | 658 - General management |
dewey-raw | 658.4/083 |
dewey-search | 658.4/083 |
dewey-sort | 3658.4 283 |
dewey-tens | 650 - Management and auxiliary services |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Electronic eBook |
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What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice criteria.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -- 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7. Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal rights.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping -- 6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2. Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply, energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 11.2.2. Management practices.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1. Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. Study questions.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">As businesses face an increasing array of environmental challenges, including climate change, air and water pollution, and solid waste management, environmental management has become an increasingly important area of expertise. 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id | ZDB-4-EBU-ocn891590938 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-26T14:49:16Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781442616783 1442616784 |
language | English |
oclc_num | 891590938 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource (xvi, 400 pages) : illustrations |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBU |
publishDate | 2014 |
publishDateSearch | 2014 |
publishDateSort | 2014 |
publisher | University of Toronto Press, |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Antweiler, Werner, author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98050459 Elements of environmental management / Werner Antweiler. Toronto ; Buffalo : University of Toronto Press, [2014] 1 online resource (xvi, 400 pages) : illustrations text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references (pages 383-386) and index. Print version record. 1.1. What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice criteria. 3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -- 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7. Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal rights. 5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping -- 6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components. 7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies. 9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2. Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply, energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 11.2.2. Management practices. 11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1. Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. Study questions. As businesses face an increasing array of environmental challenges, including climate change, air and water pollution, and solid waste management, environmental management has become an increasingly important area of expertise. Elements of Environmental Management is an interdisciplinary textbook for students and business professionals that integrates corporate environmental strategy with environmental economics, environmental law, and environmental engineering. Industrial management Environmental aspects. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95010905 Strategic planning Environmental aspects. Business enterprises Environmental aspects. Environmental protection Economic aspects. Gestion d'entreprise Aspect de l'environnement. Planification stratégique Aspect de l'environnement. Entreprises Aspect de l'environnement. Environnement Protection Aspect économique. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Industrial Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management Science. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Organizational Behavior. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS General. bisacsh Business enterprises Environmental aspects fast Environmental protection Economic aspects fast Industrial management Environmental aspects fast Strategic planning Environmental aspects fast Print version: Antweiler, Werner. Elements of environmental management 9781442648357 (DLC) 2014415432 (OCoLC)879584201 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBU FWS_PDA_EBU https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=853649 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Antweiler, Werner Elements of environmental management / 1.1. What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice criteria. 3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -- 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7. Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal rights. 5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping -- 6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components. 7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies. 9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2. Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply, energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 11.2.2. Management practices. 11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1. Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. Study questions. Industrial management Environmental aspects. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95010905 Strategic planning Environmental aspects. Business enterprises Environmental aspects. Environmental protection Economic aspects. Gestion d'entreprise Aspect de l'environnement. Planification stratégique Aspect de l'environnement. Entreprises Aspect de l'environnement. Environnement Protection Aspect économique. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Industrial Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management Science. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Organizational Behavior. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS General. bisacsh Business enterprises Environmental aspects fast Environmental protection Economic aspects fast Industrial management Environmental aspects fast Strategic planning Environmental aspects fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95010905 |
title | Elements of environmental management / |
title_auth | Elements of environmental management / |
title_exact_search | Elements of environmental management / |
title_full | Elements of environmental management / Werner Antweiler. |
title_fullStr | Elements of environmental management / Werner Antweiler. |
title_full_unstemmed | Elements of environmental management / Werner Antweiler. |
title_short | Elements of environmental management / |
title_sort | elements of environmental management |
topic | Industrial management Environmental aspects. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95010905 Strategic planning Environmental aspects. Business enterprises Environmental aspects. Environmental protection Economic aspects. Gestion d'entreprise Aspect de l'environnement. Planification stratégique Aspect de l'environnement. Entreprises Aspect de l'environnement. Environnement Protection Aspect économique. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Industrial Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management Science. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Organizational Behavior. bisacsh BUSINESS & ECONOMICS General. bisacsh Business enterprises Environmental aspects fast Environmental protection Economic aspects fast Industrial management Environmental aspects fast Strategic planning Environmental aspects fast |
topic_facet | Industrial management Environmental aspects. Strategic planning Environmental aspects. Business enterprises Environmental aspects. Environmental protection Economic aspects. Gestion d'entreprise Aspect de l'environnement. Planification stratégique Aspect de l'environnement. Entreprises Aspect de l'environnement. Environnement Protection Aspect économique. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Industrial Management. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Management Science. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Organizational Behavior. BUSINESS & ECONOMICS General. Business enterprises Environmental aspects Environmental protection Economic aspects Industrial management Environmental aspects Strategic planning Environmental aspects |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=853649 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT antweilerwerner elementsofenvironmentalmanagement |