Refine search
Results 1-4 of 4
Coral reef systems of the Mexican Caribbean: Status, recent trends and conservation
2019
Rioja-Nieto, Rodolfo | Álvarez-Filip, Lorenzo
Over the last four decades the Mexican Caribbean has experienced intensive coastal development, and change on the reef system condition has already been observed. This paper describes the reef system characteristics, at local and seascape scales, and discusses the current status and trends, considering the main research efforts from academia and Non-Governmental Organizations. To date, the coral cover of most reefs in the region is between 15 and 20%, following a slight recovery on mean coral cover over the last decade. During this same period, fleshy macroalgae and herbivorous fish biomass appear to have increased. At seascape scales, an increase of macroalgae and the loss of seagrass habitat have been observed. Considering that anthropogenic and environmental disturbances will most likely increase, the establishment of newly protected areas in the Mexican Caribbean is appropriate, but sufficient accompanying funding is required.
Show more [+] Less [-]Shades of grey: Marine litter research developments in Europe
2019
Maes, Thomas | Perry, Joe | Alliji, Khatija | Clarke, Charlotte | Birchenough, Silvana N.R.
European research efforts to address concerns in relation to increasing levels of marine litter and potential effects on ecosystems and human health have been launched. We assessed a total of 52 European projects which researched or contributed to the implementation of European marine litter legislation. These projects ranged from national initiatives, to large scale programmes involving multiple EU member states. The best represented topics within those European projects were ‘Policy, Governance and Management’ and ‘Monitoring’. Comparatively ‘Risk Assessment’, ‘Fragmentation’ and ‘Assessment Tools’ were underrepresented. The analyses showed that West-European countries have contributed more to marine litter research and therefore received more funding. As a result, thematic hotspots were present, and scientific capacity is concentrated by topic and countries. The results indicate the need to continue to support initiatives to cover clearly identified gaps, either geographic or thematic, to deliver risk assessments and recommendations to address the marine litter issue.
Show more [+] Less [-]The impact of environmental regulation on firm exports: evidence from environmental information disclosure policy in China
2019
Fang, Jiayu | Liu, Cenjie | Gao, Chao
As an important environmental regulation tool, does the environmental information disclosure have the pollution haven effect and adversely affect Chinese export? Research on such topics can provide implications for Chinese policymakers to formulate realistic environmental policies and employ information disclosure environmental regulation tools to coordinate the economic-environmental development. Using the 2003–2013 Annual Survey of Industrial Firms Database and difference-in-difference identification, we examine the effect of environmental information disclosure policy on firm exports and its impacting mechanisms. The empirical results show that the Chinese environmental information disclosure policy has reduced the scale of industrial firms’ exports in the regulated regions, indicating the existence of the pollution heaven effect in China. And also, we find that this policy mainly inhibits export activities of enterprises in coastal areas. Considering enterprise heterogeneity, the policy plays an inhibitory role in the exports of the non-state-owned firms, large firms, and low-productivity firms. Furthermore, the impact mechanism test shows that corporate financing constraint and production costs are important channels for environmental information disclosure policy affecting corporate export activities. It implies that, in developing countries such as China, policymakers and enterprises need to adopt forward-looking strategies to reduce the negative influence of environmental constraints on corporate exports and coordinate environmental governance and sound development of enterprises.
Show more [+] Less [-]The motivations of Chinese firms in response to the Carbon Disclosure Project
2019
Li, Huiyun | Fu, Shaoyan | Chen, Zheng | Shi, Jing | Yang, Zheyuan | Li, Zhaohai
Through an analysis of data gathered from Chinese firms surveyed by the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), this paper studies the motivations of Chinese firms to respond to the CDP. The results indicate that (1) Chinese firms are more inclined to respond to the CDP survey for the sense-making motivation; (2) Chinese firms are less inclined to respond to the CDP survey due to the existence of proprietary costs for information disclosure; (3) self-interested political motivation is a negative motivation for Chinese firms to respond to the CDP survey; state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are less inclined to respond to the CDP survey than are non-SOEs; and (4) Chinese firms did not consider a financing motivation when deciding whether to respond to the CDP survey. However, the results of our further research show that if firms actively respond to the CDP survey, their financing constraints can be significantly reduced. This paper studies the four motivations for Chinese firms to respond to the CDP survey, contributing to the research of carbon emission disclosure. This paper highlights the importance of corporate carbon awareness for carbon emission disclosure, builds an understanding of the internal driving forces of response to the CDP survey among Chinese firms, and thus promotes the increase of Chinese corporate disclosure of carbon emission.
Show more [+] Less [-]