The Polluters: The Making of Our Chemically Altered Environment

Hardcover
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Author: Benjamin Ross

ISBN-10: 0199739951

ISBN-13: 9780199739950

Category: Basic Materials Industries - History

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Benjamin Ross and Steven Amter here tell the story of how the chemical industry, abetted by a compliant government, set loose a plague of pollution that began in the years before and directly following World War II, a plague that still lingers today. The advent of new synthetic chemical products such as Nylon and DDT created new hazards just as the expansion and mechanization of industry exacerbated old ones. Environmental dangers well known today—smog, pesticides, lead, chlorinated solvents, asbestos, and even global warming—were already recognized in that era by chemists, engineers, doctors, and business managers. A few of them spoke out about these dangers, others overlooked scientific truth in pursuit of wealth and prestige, and many struggled to find a balance between the interests of industry and the needs of the wider world.By the mid-twentieth century, the chemical industry understood that it needed to curb its pollution. But federal government regulation, the only mechanism by which effective control could have been accomplished, faced implacable hostility from the industry. Driven by the twin forces of pecuniary interest and ideological hostility to governmental control, it exercised its considerable political and economic power to block oversight. Discovery of new environmental problems was discouraged, and research that might find them was starved of funds. When dangers did emerge, well-paid advocates concocted grounds for doubt. If a crisis exploded into public view, money and influence were deployed to steer investigations toward reassuring conclusions. The Polluters provides a panoramic view of intertwined political and scientific struggles in which the apparatus of science was harnessed to the pursuit of political victory rather than objective truth. The chemical industry lobbied congress, suppressed unwelcome research, co-opted experts, and, on occasion, simply used endless study as an excuse for inaction. Eventually the political and bureaucratic institutions created by the industry to fight off governmental oversight took on a life of their own and obstructed adequate environmental controls. The Washington Post - Seth Shulman …extensively researched and accessible…The Polluters documents with well-chosen detail how the chemical industry managed for decades…to avoid and forestall federal environmental legislation despite the increasingly glaring need for it…this is little-known history that makes for fascinating reading.

Chapter 1 - The Sorcerer's ApprenticesPart I - Summoning the SpiritsChapter 2 - Pollution Goes to Washington Chapter 3 - The Rise of the Chemical Industry Chapter 4 - Royd Sayers' Service BureauPart II - Fetching a FloodChapter 5 - The Miracle Bug-Killer Chapter 6 - Wilhelm Hueper and Environmental Cancer Chapter 7 - Bad Air in Los Angeles Chapter 8 - Donora's Strangler Smog Chapter 9 - A New Deal for Clean Water Chapter 10 - Deregulating California's Water Chapter 11 - The Stealth PollutantsPart III - Holding Back the DelugeChapter 12 - DuPont Tries to Clean Up Chapter 13 - The Industry Responds Chapter 14 - From Donora to Love Canal Chapter 15 - Epilogue: Convenient Hopes and Inconvenient Truths