Environmental, health and safety cost benefit analysis in the United States chemical industry

John H Statzer, The University of Texas Health Sciences Center at Houston School of Public Health

Abstract

The purpose of this research project is to determine whether there is a cost/benefit to allocating financial and other company-related resources to improve environmental, health and safety performance beyond that which is required by law. The issue of whether a company benefits from spending dollars to achieve environmental, health and safety performance beyond legal compliance is an important issue to the chemical manufacturing industry in the United States because of the voluminous and complex legal requirements impacting environmental, health and safety expenditures. The cost/benefit issue has practical significance because many U.S. chemical manufacturing companies base their environmental, health and safety management strategies on just achieving and maintaining compliance with legal requirements when in reality this strategy may actually be a higher cost way of managing environmental, health and safety practices. This difference in environmental, health and safety management strategy is being investigated to determine if managing environmental, health and safety to achieve performance beyond that which is required by law results in a greater benefit to companies in the U.S. chemical manufacturing sector.

Recommended Citation

Statzer, John H, "Environmental, health and safety cost benefit analysis in the United States chemical industry" (2005). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI3180795.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI3180795

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