Techniques of environmental appraisal and valuation play an important role in the context of sustainability assessment. They are at the heart of methods for quantifying economic and social costs and benefits, as well as the direct ecological impacts that are an inevitable side-effect of material ‘progress’. Concepts such as the physical life cycle of products and processes, and the need for clearly defined system boundaries, are key elements in environmental problem-solving. However, some economists would claim that, as a ‘normative’ discipline, their methods can be extended to incorporate all of society's environmental concerns. In contrast, engineers and environmental professionals have at times argued that economic techniques (such as cost–benefit analyses) may well obscure the impacts of different courses of action, and that decision makers consequently become less well informed rather than the reverse. Aggregate decision criteria, for example, often conceal the weighing of various impacts. By contrast, the sort of ‘prescriptive’ analytical tools emanating from engineering and the physical sciences can provide alternative insights that complement those that spring from economics. These include thermodynamic (energy and exergy) analysis and environmental life-cycle assessment. A range of interrelated environmental project appraisal techniques is therefore examined in order to determine their relative merits. Practical examples involving resource (energy and hydraulic oil) use, pollutant emissions, and waste disposal and recycling (of hydraulic oils) indicate that many of these methods can play an important evaluative role as part of an interdisciplinary toolkit within a general systems framework. Nevertheless, caution needs to be used when adopting economic and engineering analysis techniques so as to ensure that they are fit for their sustainability purpose.
Article navigation
August 2006
Research Article|
August 01 2006
Interdisciplinary perspectives on environmental appraisal and valuation techniques Available to Purchase
G. P. Hammond;
G. P. Hammond
Professor of Mechanical Engineering
University of Bath
UK
Search for other works by this author on:
A. B. Winnett
A. B. Winnett
Senior Lecturer in Economics
University of Bath
UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
February 27 2006
Accepted:
January 04 2007
Online ISSN: 1747-6534
Print ISSN: 1747-6526
© 2006 Thomas Telford Ltd
2006
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Waste and Resource Management (2006) 159 (3): 117–130.
Article history
Received:
February 27 2006
Accepted:
January 04 2007
Citation
Hammond GP, Winnett AB (2006), "Interdisciplinary perspectives on environmental appraisal and valuation techniques". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Waste and Resource Management, Vol. 159 No. 3 pp. 117–130, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/warm.2006.159.3.117
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Does quality of the built environment affect social cohesion?
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning (September,2008)
Scenarios analysis through a futures performance framework
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability (October,2013)
Comparative analysis of the performance of bioretention implementation at a roadside area in Malaysia
Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science (July,2021)
A'Samaliah island, UAE: a case study in sustainability
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering (December,2009)
Manufacturing’s role in corporate environmental sustainability ‐ Concerns for the new millennium
International Journal of Operations & Production Management (May,2001)
Related Chapters
Sufficiency Orientation in Global Marketing
Global Marketing in Times of Disruption
Subsidy as a Means to Promote Sustainable Tourism for the Development of Economic Growth: A Critical Study
Sustainable Tourism, Part B: A Comprehensive Multidimensional Perspective
Women and Sustainable Tourism: Experiences of Environmental Protection and Conservation in the Philippines
Revisiting Sustainable Tourism in the Philippines: Towards a Better Normal
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
