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- From: rich@astro.umd.edu (Rich Puchalsky)
- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Subject: "Earth Budget" report
- Message-ID: <18172@umd5.umd.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 03:29:30 GMT
- Sender: news@umd5.umd.edu
- Organization: U. of Maryland @ College Park, Astronomy
- Lines: 36
-
- I would like to recommend a report "Earth Budget: Making our tax dollars
- work for the environment" that has recently been published by the
- environmental group Friends of the Earth. This report details an
- analysis of how much each U.S. Federal agency spends on the environment.
- (Of course, this may not be of much interest to those of you who live
- outside the U.S.) The report breaks down funding into 12 environmental
- categories, including "International Assistance" and "Population", as well
- as describing the environmental budget of each agency. The report claims
- that total U.S. environmental spending is $34 billion annually (about 2
- cents out of every Federal dollar). It also details an "anti-environmental
- budget" of $14 billion per year in the form of tax expenditures, subsidies,
- and spending programs that encourage environmetal destruction. A major
- thesis of the report is that the envioronmental budget can be increased
- without increasing the deficit by eliminating the anti-environmental
- budget.
-
- Scientists reading this group may be particularly interested in the
- section on research spending. According to the report, the U.S. spends
- about $4 billion per year total on environmental research, about the
- same amount of money as is spent on the Star Wars (SDI) program. The EPA
- R & D budget in particular has declined by 11% in constant dollars
- since 1980. The EPA's total operating budget is only 5% higher than
- in 1979, even through the report estimates that EPA's workload has
- doubled since then.
-
- To order this report, you can call Public Interest Publications at
- 1-800-537-9359. Unfortunately I don't know how much it costs, since
- I got my copy free for some minor help I contributed to the "Chemical
- Accidents and Right-To-Know" section. (I am not a member of Friends
- of the Earth, nor will I gain any financial benefit from sales of
- this publication.) I am interested in hearing whether other people
- find it useful, and how accurate it is. I think that many of the
- discussions on this newsgroup might benefit from real world
- considerations of how much money we are spending in one area or
- another; although of course money spent does not directly correlate
- to environmental progress.
-