Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan

This document aims to deepen the understanding of the effects of environmental pollution on health and standards of living in Pakistan. It seeks to assess institutional capacity to facilitate a transition to environmentally sustainable growth, as well as to strengthen dialogue among different stakeholders. The Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) builds on a substantial body of related work. This includes a CEA conducted in 2006, as well as documents addressing environmental management in Sindh, sectoral water resources, forestry and fisheries management, and analyses of climate risks. The CEA recognizes the importance of increasing climate resilience (Pakistan is the fifth most exposed country in the world to climate change) but climate change management is not themain focus. The CEA is written within the context of recent important institutional and political development, including the 18th Amendment of 2010. These changes included a greater focus on devolution. Most environmental oversight functions were decentralized from the federal government to the provincial administrations, and also involve local governments. Four technical areas of analysis, on the health costs of air and water pollution, on decentralization, on environmental management in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and on environmental management of industry in Punjab—provide key inputs. The document builds on consultations involving stakeholders from the national and provincial governments, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and international cooperation agencies. Although the CEA recognizes the importance of addressing natural resource degradation and air and water pollution in rural areas, recommendations focus on measures to addresspollution in urban areas. The conclusion is that air and water pollution and natural resource degradation continue to impose heavy costs on Pakistan’s citizens and the economy through their impact on health and productivity. A more environmentally sustainable growth path will play a key role in Pakistan’s longer-term development and transformation to an upper-middle income country. Priorities for improved environmental management focus include (a) improving environmental monitoring by environmental protection agencies (EPAs) and local governments; (b) enhancing the devolution of environmental responsibilities for better service delivery; (c) improving coordination among the federal, provincial, and local levels, and among sectors; (d) ‘greening’ future investments, and (e) using the power of public pressure.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-06-19
Subjects:ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, WATER POLLUTION, AIR QUALITY, DRINKING WATER, TOXIC WASTE, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, POLLUTION CONTROL, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, KHYBER, PUNJAB, GREEN ISSUES, ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/746031566833355389/Opportunities-for-a-Clean-and-Green-Pakistan-A-Country-Environmental-Analysis
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32328
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spelling dig-okr-10986323282024-08-07T19:07:45Z Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan A Country Environmental Analysis World Bank ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION WATER POLLUTION AIR QUALITY DRINKING WATER TOXIC WASTE INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION POLLUTION CONTROL REGULATORY FRAMEWORK KHYBER PUNJAB GREEN ISSUES ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS This document aims to deepen the understanding of the effects of environmental pollution on health and standards of living in Pakistan. It seeks to assess institutional capacity to facilitate a transition to environmentally sustainable growth, as well as to strengthen dialogue among different stakeholders. The Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) builds on a substantial body of related work. This includes a CEA conducted in 2006, as well as documents addressing environmental management in Sindh, sectoral water resources, forestry and fisheries management, and analyses of climate risks. The CEA recognizes the importance of increasing climate resilience (Pakistan is the fifth most exposed country in the world to climate change) but climate change management is not themain focus. The CEA is written within the context of recent important institutional and political development, including the 18th Amendment of 2010. These changes included a greater focus on devolution. Most environmental oversight functions were decentralized from the federal government to the provincial administrations, and also involve local governments. Four technical areas of analysis, on the health costs of air and water pollution, on decentralization, on environmental management in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and on environmental management of industry in Punjab—provide key inputs. The document builds on consultations involving stakeholders from the national and provincial governments, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and international cooperation agencies. Although the CEA recognizes the importance of addressing natural resource degradation and air and water pollution in rural areas, recommendations focus on measures to addresspollution in urban areas. The conclusion is that air and water pollution and natural resource degradation continue to impose heavy costs on Pakistan’s citizens and the economy through their impact on health and productivity. A more environmentally sustainable growth path will play a key role in Pakistan’s longer-term development and transformation to an upper-middle income country. Priorities for improved environmental management focus include (a) improving environmental monitoring by environmental protection agencies (EPAs) and local governments; (b) enhancing the devolution of environmental responsibilities for better service delivery; (c) improving coordination among the federal, provincial, and local levels, and among sectors; (d) ‘greening’ future investments, and (e) using the power of public pressure. 2019-08-29T16:35:08Z 2019-08-29T16:35:08Z 2019-06-19 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/746031566833355389/Opportunities-for-a-Clean-and-Green-Pakistan-A-Country-Environmental-Analysis https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32328 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
WATER POLLUTION
AIR QUALITY
DRINKING WATER
TOXIC WASTE
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
KHYBER
PUNJAB
GREEN ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
WATER POLLUTION
AIR QUALITY
DRINKING WATER
TOXIC WASTE
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
KHYBER
PUNJAB
GREEN ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS
spellingShingle ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
WATER POLLUTION
AIR QUALITY
DRINKING WATER
TOXIC WASTE
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
KHYBER
PUNJAB
GREEN ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
WATER POLLUTION
AIR QUALITY
DRINKING WATER
TOXIC WASTE
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
KHYBER
PUNJAB
GREEN ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS
World Bank
Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
description This document aims to deepen the understanding of the effects of environmental pollution on health and standards of living in Pakistan. It seeks to assess institutional capacity to facilitate a transition to environmentally sustainable growth, as well as to strengthen dialogue among different stakeholders. The Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) builds on a substantial body of related work. This includes a CEA conducted in 2006, as well as documents addressing environmental management in Sindh, sectoral water resources, forestry and fisheries management, and analyses of climate risks. The CEA recognizes the importance of increasing climate resilience (Pakistan is the fifth most exposed country in the world to climate change) but climate change management is not themain focus. The CEA is written within the context of recent important institutional and political development, including the 18th Amendment of 2010. These changes included a greater focus on devolution. Most environmental oversight functions were decentralized from the federal government to the provincial administrations, and also involve local governments. Four technical areas of analysis, on the health costs of air and water pollution, on decentralization, on environmental management in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and on environmental management of industry in Punjab—provide key inputs. The document builds on consultations involving stakeholders from the national and provincial governments, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and international cooperation agencies. Although the CEA recognizes the importance of addressing natural resource degradation and air and water pollution in rural areas, recommendations focus on measures to addresspollution in urban areas. The conclusion is that air and water pollution and natural resource degradation continue to impose heavy costs on Pakistan’s citizens and the economy through their impact on health and productivity. A more environmentally sustainable growth path will play a key role in Pakistan’s longer-term development and transformation to an upper-middle income country. Priorities for improved environmental management focus include (a) improving environmental monitoring by environmental protection agencies (EPAs) and local governments; (b) enhancing the devolution of environmental responsibilities for better service delivery; (c) improving coordination among the federal, provincial, and local levels, and among sectors; (d) ‘greening’ future investments, and (e) using the power of public pressure.
format Report
topic_facet ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
WATER POLLUTION
AIR QUALITY
DRINKING WATER
TOXIC WASTE
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
KHYBER
PUNJAB
GREEN ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY STANDARDS
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
title_short Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
title_full Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
title_fullStr Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Opportunities for a Clean and Green Pakistan
title_sort opportunities for a clean and green pakistan
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-06-19
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/746031566833355389/Opportunities-for-a-Clean-and-Green-Pakistan-A-Country-Environmental-Analysis
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32328
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