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This Is Not a Polish JokeIndustrious endeavors in the former Soviet empire11 Nov 1999
America's market-based solutions to environmental problems tend to look a lot like something you might have seen in an old Soviet propaganda film.
Real Soviet propaganda.
Recently, however, I discovered a far more effective and humane market-based system for reducing pollution -- developed in a former Soviet client state, of all places. And, believe me, this is no Polish joke. The Poles, whose entrepreneurial spirit is driving a booming economy a decade after the fall of Communism, have come up with a pollution cleanup system I call "payments and penalties."
These American smokestacks are begging for a Polish scrub.
Touring Poland with fellow journalists, I was amazed to see the leapfrogging effect this has had on infamous Soviet-era polluted industrial sites like the Nova Huta Steel Works outside Krakow and the 600-acre Palavay chemical plant. While much of Nova Huta had to be shut down because of its inefficiency and poisonous impacts, part of it now contains a state-of-the-art cold steel press plant, bought from Italy with one of these environmental loans.
Cold, hard steel.
A recent International Monetary Fund report found that Poland's payment-and-penalty system is one of the most creative anti-pollution initiatives in the world. The Poles, being diplomatic, point out that the U.S. is still the leader in terms of creating new green technologies. It's just that we haven't been very creative in developing market incentives to promote them. Still, the Poles are not about to make fun of us. Well, one of my Polish journalist colleagues did tell me the American joke about the Pole who comes to New York ... but, er, maybe that one's not appropriate for a family e-zine. |
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