A Barrier to Effective Environmental Regulation

Huang Yang*

Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering, University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark

*Corresponding Author:
Huang Yang
Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering, University of Denmark, Lyngby,
Denmark,
Email: Yang@gmail.com

Received date: January 22, 2024, Manuscript No. IPGJRR-24-18855; Editor assigned date: January 24, 2024, PreQC No. IPGJRR-24-18855 (PQ); Reviewed date: February 07, 2024, QC No. IPGJRR-24-18855; Revised date: February 14, 2024, Manuscript No. IPGJRR-24-18855 (R); Published date: February 21, 2024, DOI: 10.36648/2393-8854.11.1.78

Citation: Yang H (2024) A Barrier to Effective Environmental Regulation. Glob J Res Rev.11.1:78.

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Description

It is commonly acknowledged that cooperation across stakeholders in the policy-making sector is essential to minimizing anthropogenic consequences on the environment. Nonetheless, obstacles to putting environmental legislation into practice are still being found. The Homo economics concept, which is predicated on self-interest and places the economy above the welfare of the environment, has been proposed as the cause of the failure of environmental legislation. This report suggests that the effectiveness of environmental law implementation is also influenced by other factors, including non-compliance, gaps in research and knowledge, and regime type. To critically analyze the causes for the non-implementation of water law in global north and global south countries, a semisystematic study of the literature was carried out. The findings demonstrate that essential concepts' ambiguity is the root cause of non-compliance. Due to educational disparities between the global north and global south, this results in misinterpretation, a lack of legal enforcement, and false information. This implies that a major contributing factor to the failure of environmental regulations is their underlying core concepts, which are derived from treaties. The degree of policy execution can also be influenced by knowledge of the type of regime and economically dependent nations. The paper's conclusions can aid in comprehending the divergent viewpoints regarding the cause of environmental failure. It also provides a forum for debate on how to enhance international environmental rules so that they can be suitably incorporated into domestic legislation.

Environmental law

A semi-systematic study of the literature was done to look into this allegation and find out why water policies in the global north and global south haven't been implemented successfully. The findings demonstrated that uncertainty in important definitions contained in environmental laws was the cause of non-compliance. Non-implementation is also influenced by factors such as misinformation resulting from educational disparities between the global north and the global south, and a lack of legal enforcement. This study makes the case that a major factor in the non-implementation of policies is the fundamental treaty concept of environmental law. It concludes that the degree of policy execution is influenced by several factors, including the type of regime and economically dependent regions. The results of this study offer a convincing viewpoint on the nuances of international environmental law and how they affect the application of domestic policy. Novel strategies for bridging the gap between domestic transposition and international environmental legislation can be investigated by emphasizing the challenges presented by treaty-based principles and their inherent ambiguity. Data on the environmental characteristics and sustainability performance of farms are becoming more and more important for agricultural policy in order to encourage more ecologically friendly farming. Farmers must supply data, although some of these can be addressed by newly gathered data from remote sensing or by data already in the database.

Hungarian farmers

The purpose of our study was to find out how hungarian farmers felt about environmental challenges and how they felt about gathering pertinent data. The Farm Accountancy Data Network (FADN) survey of farms found that gathering and reporting environmental data presents a number of difficulties for farmers. The willingness to gather environmental data is somewhat increased by perceived environmental difficulties. Farmers are not a uniform group, though, and a wide range of socioeconomic and attitude characteristics affect how they behave. The variety of their answers on the issues they saw, how they resolved them, and how eager they were to gather information was depicted using a sankey diagram. The trend in European agricultural policy towards sustainability can be attributed to social and environmental concerns, including but not limited to pollution, climate change, soil degradation, biodiversity loss, and rural inequality. The European Commission released "The European Green Deal," a communication, in 2019 to address environmental and climate-related issues. Its principal goals are to improve the health and well-being of current and future generations, attain net zero greenhouse gas emissions, and make Europe climate neutral by 2050. It suggests new policies in the areas of energy, transportation, environment, agriculture, and industrial policy in order to accomplish these aims. The farm to fork strategy, the agricultural component of the green deal, seeks to reduce the use of pesticides, fertilizers, and antibiotics while expanding organic farming in order to establish a just, healthy, and ecologically sustainable food system. Farmers are essential to the conservation of biodiversity, as the EU Biodiversity Strategy emphasizes.

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