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close this bookEnvironmental Change and International Law: New Challenges and Dimensions (UNU, 1992, 493 pages)
close this folderIssues in international environmental law
close this folder4. Emerging principles and rules for the prevention and mitigation of environmental harm
View the document(introductory text...)
View the documentIntroduction
View the document1. Significance and role of principles and rules of prevention and mitigation
View the document2. Traditional norms, principles, and rules
View the document3. Characteristics of global environmental change
View the document4. Double-track approach as a treaty-making technique
View the document5. Emerging principles and rules of prevention and mitigation
View the document6. Toward an international management of global environmental change
View the documentNotes

1. Significance and role of principles and rules of prevention and mitigation

Prevention and mitigation are two tools used for the protection of the environment. The principle of prevention purports to prevent specific harms from arising, e.g., alteration of the environment, damage to people or the environment, interference with legitimate and legal uses of the environment, and overload of the assimilative capacity of the environment.1 The principle of mitigation, on the other hand, purports to minimize the occurrence of such specific harms. Principles of prevention and mitigation work together in the international regulation of pollution or environmental harm.

Prevention is less costly than reparation both in economic and social terms because of the intrinsic nature of pollution or environmental harm - i.e., their long-lasting and irreversible detrimental effects upon people and the environment. Consequently, more importance has been given in international environmental law to the principles of prevention and mitigation than to reparation. While the principle of liability does have a deterrent effect on environmental harm, preventive and mitigative measures have an even more direct and effective deterrent effect.