An EIS typically has four sections (Eccleston 2014):
1 An introduction including a statement of the purpose and need of the proposed action.
2 A description of the affected environment.
3 A range of alternatives to the proposed action. Alternatives are considered the “heart” of the EIS.An analysis of the environmental impacts of each of the possible alternatives. This section covers topics such as the following:Impacts to threatened or endangered speciesAir and water quality impactsImpacts to historic and cultural sites, particularly sites of significant importance to indigenous peoples.Social and economic impacts to local communities, often including consideration of attributes such as impacts to available housing stock, economic impacts to businesses, property values, aesthetics, and noise within the affected area.Cost analysis for each alternative, including costs to mitigate expected impacts, to determine if the proposed action is a prudent use of taxpayer dollars.
2.12 International Law
It is well known that the United Nations Conference in Stockholm on the human environment is a landmark milestone at the international arena for the protection of the deteriorating environment. The conference laid emphasis on the need that man's capabilities to transform his surroundings must be wisely used. Wrong and unwise use can do incalculable harm to human beings and the human environment. It was suggested by the Conference that developing countries must direct their efforts toward balancing their priorities with the need to check increasing population. Moreover, the conference identified the areas and laid down the principles on which the nations should take up and enact laws for protecting environment. These principles have been incorporated in the Stockholm Declaration (British Institute of International and Comparative Environmental Law 1992; Caldwell 1996; Koivurova 2014; Muralikrishna and Manickam 2017). In this process, there are national and international dimensions of environmental law.
Global and regional environmental issues are increasingly the subject of international law. Debates over environmental concerns implicate core principles of international law and have been the subject of numerous international agreements and declarations (see Appendix B).
Customary international law is an important source of international environmental law. These are the norms and rules that countries follow as a matter of custom and they are so prevalent that they bind all states in the world. When a principle becomes customary law is not clear cut and many arguments are put forward by states not wishing to be bound. Examples of customary international law relevant to the environment include the duty to warn other states promptly about icons of an environmental nature and environmental damages to which another state or states may be exposed, and Principle 21 of the Stockholm Declaration.
Numerous legally binding international agreements encompass a wide variety of issue areas, from terrestrial, marine, and atmospheric pollution through to wildlife and biodiversity protection. International environmental agreements are generally multilateral (or sometimes bilateral) treaties (a.k.a. convention, agreement, protocol, etc.). Protocols are subsidiary agreements built from a primary treaty. They exist in many areas of international law but are especially useful in the environmental field, where they may be used to regularly incorporate recent scientific knowledge. They also permit countries to reach agreement on a framework that would be contentious if every detail were to be agreed upon in advance. The most widely known protocol in international environmental law is the Kyoto Protocol, which followed from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
While the bodies that proposed, argued, agreed upon, and ultimately adopted existing international agreements vary according to each agreement, certain conferences, including 1972s United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, 1983s World Commission on Environment and Development, 1992s United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, and 2002s World Summit on Sustainable Development have been particularly important. Multilateral environmental agreements sometimes create an International Organization, Institution, or Body responsible for implementing the agreement. Major examples are the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
International environmental law also includes the opinions of international courts and tribunals. While there are few and they have limited authority, the decisions carry much weight with legal commentators and are quite influential on the development of international environmental law. One of the biggest challenges in international decisions is to determine an adequate compensation for environmental damages (Hardman Reis 2011). The courts include the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the international Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, the European Court of Justice, European Court of Human Rights, and other regional treaty tribunals.
2.12.1 Africa
According to the International Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement, the major environmental issues in Africa are “drought and flooding, air pollution, deforestation, loss of biodiversity, freshwater availability, degradation of soil and vegetation, and widespread poverty.” The USEPA is focused on the “growing urban and industrial pollution, water quality, electronic waste, and indoor air from cook stoves.” They hope to provide enough aid on concerns regarding pollution before their impacts contaminate the African environment as well as the global environment. By doing so, they intend to “protect human health, particularly vulnerable populations such as children and the poor” (EPA 2012). In order to accomplish these goals in Africa, EPA programs are focused on strengthening the ability to enforce environmental laws as well as public compliance to them. Other programs work on developing stronger environmental laws, regulations, and standards.
2.12.2 Asia
The Asian Environmental Compliance and Enforcement Network (AECEN) is an agreement between 16 Asian countries dedicated to improving cooperation with environmental laws in Asia. These countries include Cambodia, China, Indonesia, India, Maldives, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Pakistan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, and Lao PDR (AECEN 2018).
2.12.3 European Union
The European Union issues secondary legislation on environmental issues that are valid throughout the EU (so‐called regulations) and many directives that must be implemented into national legislation from the 28 member states (national states). Examples are the Regulation (EC) No. 338/97 on the implementation of CITES; or the Natura 2000 network the centerpiece for nature and biodiversity policy, encompassing the bird directive (79/409/EEC/ changed to 2009/147/EC) and the habitats directive (92/43/EEC), which are made up of multiple SACs (Special Areas of Conservation, linked to the habitats directive) and SPAs (Special Protected Areas, linked to the bird directive) throughout Europe.
EU legislation is ruled in Article 249 Treaty for the Functioning of the European Union. Topics for common EU legislation are as follows:
Climate change
Air pollution
Water protection and management
Waste management
Soil protection
Protection of nature, species, and biodiversity
Noise pollution
Cooperation for the environment with third countries (other than EU member states)
Civil protection
2.12.4