Mitigation Banking and the Problem of Consolidation
Document Type
Conference Paper
Journal/Book Title/Conference
XXII World Congress ofPhilosophy
Publication Date
6-1-2008
Abstract
A mitigation bank is a large wetland or wetland complex that is developed for the sake of selling credits to private developers or government agencies to compensate for the destruction of natural wetlands. The United States Army Corps of Engineers often sets as a condition for issuing a Section 404 permit the purchase of a certain number of bank credits. Mitigation banking is now emphasized within Corps’ policy, and it has become big business within the United States. Arguments for mitigation banking stress the efficiency in permitting and monitoring that banking makes possible. Proponents of banking claim that banking is ecologically beneficial to wetland plants and animals, but recent studies have shown that mitigation banking threatens biodiversity. The problem, generally, is consolidation. Underlying mitigation banking, and embedded within Corps policy, is the assumption that preservation of wetland functions must accommodate to a large extent desired levels of economic development and efficiency in the development process.
Recommended Citation
Gordon Steinhoff, “Mitigation Banking and the Problem of Consolidation,” XXII World Congress of Philosophy, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, August 2008.