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In April 1992 the Foundation Eni Enrico Mattei organized a workshop
on the regulation of nonpoint source pollution. This volume
inc1udes the proceedings of that meeting, as well as additional
original contributions, in an attempt to provide an overview of
recent theoretical developments in the field. Research on the
causes, consequences, and control of nonpoint source pol lution has
been carried out over the last two decades. Interest in this
subject has grown as a result of the increasing recognition of the
insufficiency of traditional pollution control policies focused on
the large scale, confined, and general ly predictable pollutant
discharges. In fact, many contemporary problems are caused by the
combined activities of small polluters, along with natural pro
cesses, intermittent and unpredictable events, and often involve
pollutants with complex environmental outcomes. Despite the
progress made in understanding the nature and size of pollution
from diffuse sources, the issue of regulation is still far from
being system at ically and adequately addressed. This policy vacuum
is partly attributable to the difficulty of adapting the
traditional point source regulatory tool kit to the specific
features of nonpoint source problems. Such features inc1ude the
tech nical difficulty of identifying sources and measuring
individual emissions, their variability over time and space, the
role played by natural processes in detennin ing pollutant
discharges at source and their ultimate impacts on the receiving
environmental media."
In April 1992 the Foundation Eni Enrico Mattei organized a workshop
on the regulation of nonpoint source pollution. This volume
inc1udes the proceedings of that meeting, as well as additional
original contributions, in an attempt to provide an overview of
recent theoretical developments in the field. Research on the
causes, consequences, and control of nonpoint source pol lution has
been carried out over the last two decades. Interest in this
subject has grown as a result of the increasing recognition of the
insufficiency of traditional pollution control policies focused on
the large scale, confined, and general ly predictable pollutant
discharges. In fact, many contemporary problems are caused by the
combined activities of small polluters, along with natural pro
cesses, intermittent and unpredictable events, and often involve
pollutants with complex environmental outcomes. Despite the
progress made in understanding the nature and size of pollution
from diffuse sources, the issue of regulation is still far from
being system at ically and adequately addressed. This policy vacuum
is partly attributable to the difficulty of adapting the
traditional point source regulatory tool kit to the specific
features of nonpoint source problems. Such features inc1ude the
tech nical difficulty of identifying sources and measuring
individual emissions, their variability over time and space, the
role played by natural processes in detennin ing pollutant
discharges at source and their ultimate impacts on the receiving
environmental media."
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