Addis Ababa University
Ethiopian Institute of Architecture, Building Construction &
City Development (EiABC)
Course: Environmental Planning
Program: B.Sc in COTM
Lecture-3
Presentation Contents
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
Introduction
EIA
Procedures in EIA
EIA and Construction
Brain Storming
o What do you understand from EIA or any experience to share?
o What is the linkage between Construction and EIA?
o What is the significance of EIA in construction industry?
o What do you expect to gain from EIA?
. INTRODUCTION
Bear in mind that:
Whenever any:
program
Policy
construction activity or
site development is introduced in to a country, society or specific area,
Two new things will be injected in to the Environment and the Society.
1.Positive +ve = Encourage them
2. Negative -ve = Mitigate them with appropriate measures
e.g. Road Construction: -----------------Discussion??
In the light of this all the fore-coming discussions under this part will spin
around on such issues
• Economic development in developing countries has been focused:
On immediate economic gains
Environmental protection has not been a priority in these countries;
because the economic losses from environmental degradation often
occur long after the economic benefits of development have been
realized
• The past failure of development planning processes to take adequate account of
the detrimental impacts of economic development activities led to:
The advent of environmental impact assessment (EIA) processes
• EIA was first employed by industrialized countries in the early 1970s
• Since that time, most countries have adopted EIA processes to examine the
social and environmental consequences of projects prior to their execution
• The purpose of these processes is to provide information to decision
makers and the public about the environmental implications of proposed
actions before decisions are made
Development and Environment
Agriculture expansion, urbanization and infrastructure development are the
major causes of environmental degradation
For example;
with Agriculture expansion: Deforestation, pollution (water, Air and
Land) occurs
with Urbanization: Deforestation, pollution (waste generation) occurs
Pollution is widespread.
Existing air pollution is being aggravated by increases in the use of low
quality petroleum and coal for transportation and energy.
The amount of toxic and hazardous material discharged into the
ambient environment is also rapidly increasing.
Urban populations are being exposed to un-quantified or qualified levels
of toxic pollutants because of industrial growth
All these are the bad faces of development.
It is these negative impacts on the environment that calls EIA to be considered
before any project, program or policy is enacted.
Aims and objectives of EIA
EIA can:
Modify and improve design
Ensure efficient resource use
Enhance social aspects
Identify key impacts and measures for mitigating them
Inform decision-making and condition-setting
Avoid serious and irreversible damage to the environment
Protect human health and safety
The EIA process should be
Purposive – meeting its aims and objectives
Focused – concentrating on the effects that matter
Adaptive – responding to issues and realities
Participative – fully involving the public
Transparent – clear and easily understood
Rigorous – employing ‘best practicable’ methodology
Practical – establishing mitigation measures that work
Credible – carried out with objectivity and professionalism
Efficient – imposing least cost burden on proponents
Key operating principles of good EIA practice
EIA should:
Be applied to all proposals with significant impacts
Begin early in the project cycle
Address relevant environmental, social and health impacts
Identify and take account of public views
Result in a statement of impacts and mitigation measures
Facilitate informed decision making and condition
setting
EIA and Development Planning
• EIA has an important role to play in resolving the aforementioned environmental
problems through its ability to:
contribute to environmentally sound and sustainable development.
EIA Inputs to the Project Cycle
• Increasingly, countries are enacting laws requiring EIAs for all major projects.
Stages of project cycle
A generalized project cycle can be described in terms of six main stages:
1) project concept
2) prefeasibility
3) feasibility
4) design and engineering
5) implementation; and
6) monitoring and evaluation
EIA has a role to play at each stage in the cycle,
Outputs of the EIA Process
The main goal of EIA is:
To influence development decision-making by providing sound information on
environmental impacts and the means for preventing or reducing those impacts
Analysis of Environmental Effects
• EIA analysis has three sequential phases:
Identification
Prediction, and
Assessment
• Identification involves characterizing the existing physical, social, economic,
and ecological environment and identifying components of a development
project which are likely to impact that environment
For example Results of an analysis of the environmental
effects of a highway project may include:
1. Noise: The planned highway may to pass through residential areas
which will disturb the surrounding residents.
2. Social Impacts: Social impacts includes the interference of the
highway with pedestrian traffic routes.
3. Water Resources Impacts: The flood which will be discharged in to
the nearby water resources will degrade the water quality.
While the impervious highway surface would increase run-off during
and after rain, the steep gradients of the small watercourses which
drain the highway would make significant flooding.
4. Air Impacts: Air pollution from vehicle exhaust will pollute the air resource.
5. Traffic Impacts: The impact on traffic during the construction phase is expected
to increase congestion, particularly at the entry and exit points, and the presence
of maintenance vehicles, machinery and staff on the road.
6. Erosion and Slope Stability Impacts: Erosion is expected to continue through
the construction phases on embankments & cut slopes, especially where
vegetation cover was incomplete.
Environmental Management Plan
Environmental protection measures are taken to:
• Mitigate environmental impacts
• Provide in-kind compensation for lost environmental resources; or
• Enhance environmental resources
One of the goals of the EIA processes is to develop an implementable
set of environmental protection measures
• These measures are normally set out in an environmental management
plan
Environmental Monitoring Program
Environmental monitoring involves the systematic collection of data to
determine:
• The actual environmental effects of a project;
• The compliance of the project with regulatory standards; or
• The degree of implementation of environmental protection measures and
success of the environmental protection measures.
The information generated by monitoring programs provides the
feedback necessary to:
• ensure that environmental protection measures have been effective in helping
achieve an environmentally sound project.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
• It refers to the need “to identify & predict the impact on:
the environment and
on man’s health and
well-being of legislative proposals, policies, programs, projects &
operational procedures, and to interpret & communicate information about
the impacts”,
• “The term ‘environmental assessment’ describes:
a technique and a process by which information about the environmental
effects of a project is collected, both:
by the developer and from other sources, and
taken into account by the planning authority in forming their judgments
on whether the development should go ahead.”
Benefits of EIA include
Environmentally sound and sustainable design
Better compliance with standards
Savings in capital and operating costs
Reduced time and costs for approvals
Increased project acceptance
Better protection of the environment and human health
ACTORS INVOLVED IN THE EIA PROCESS
Project Proponent
Consultant
Interested and affected parties
Decision Maker (e.g. EPA)
EIA PROCESS
Prescreening
Screening
Scoping
Reviewing
Monitoring
Note: Each will be discussed in next slides
The EIA process comprises
Screening - to decide if and at what level EIA should be applied
Scoping - to identify the important issues and prepare terms of
reference
Impact analysis - to predict the effects of a proposal and
evaluate their significance
Mitigation - to establish measures to prevent, reduce or
compensate for impacts
Reporting - to prepare the information necessary for decision-making
Review - to check the quality of the EIA report
Decision-making - to approve (or reject) the proposal and set
conditions
Follow up – to monitor, manage and audit the impacts of project
implementation
Public involvement - to inform and consult with stakeholders
Generalized EIA Process Flowchart
Proposal
identification
EIA required Screening No EIA
Initial
Scoping environmental
examination
Impact analysis
Mitigation
and impact
management
*Public involvement
Resubmit EIA report
*Public involvement typically
occurs at these points.
It may also occur at any
Redesign Review other stage of the EIA Process
Not approved Decision-making
Approved
Information from this process
contributes to effective EIA in the future
Implementation
and post-EIA
monitoring
SCREENING
What is screening?
The screening process determines:
Whether or not EIA is required for a
particular project
What level of EIA is required
Not required
Partial or
Full
Screening outcomes
Full or comprehensive EIA required
Limited EIA required
No EIA required
Screening tools (methods)
Legal/policy definition
Project lists:
Inclusive — listed projects must undergo EIA
Exclusive — listed projects exempted from EIA
Case-by-case examinations:
Determine whether projects may have significant environmental
effects
If so, project should undergo EIA
Combination of above
Typical proposals requiring a full EIA
Dams and reservoirs
Resettlement and urban development
Infrastructure (e.g. transport and sanitation)
Industrial facilities (e.g. manufacturing plants)
Energy and minerals extraction (e.g. oil & gas, coal)
Waste management and disposal of hazardous and toxic
materials
Energy development (power stations, transmission lines,
pipelines)
An Initial Environmental Examination (IEE)
Describes the proposal
Considers alternatives
Addresses the concerns of the community
Identifies potential environmental effects
Establishes mitigation measures
Includes monitoring and follow up (as necessary)
Recommended elements for effective screening in Ethiopia
Mandatory application of EIA should be based on the list
established in Annex I of the EIA Guideline Document
Case-by-case screening should be applied, based on criteria
defined in the Procedural EIA Guideline
(Get the doc and keep it for your future use)
Lecture-4
SCOPING
What is scoping?
An early stage of the EIA process
Begins once screening is completed
Identifies key issues and impacts to
be considered
Establishes the content and scope of an
EIA report
It is the most important step in EIA lays the foundation of an effective
process, saves time and money, and reduces conflict
Emphasis to be given during scoping phase
early step:- begins once screening completed
open, interactive process: – involves the public
lays the foundation of an EIA: – by identifying
boundaries of the EIA study
the information necessary for decision-making
key issues and significant impacts to be considered
Guiding principles to conduct scoping
scoping is a process not an activity or event
design the scoping process for each proposal
start early, as soon as information permits
prepare information package on what is expected
specify the role of the public in decision-making
approach should be systematic; implementation should be
flexible
document the results to guide preparation of EIA
respond to new information and issues as necessary
Elements of scoping
define the parameters of the EIA study
Identify & inform stakeholders
identify stakeholder concerns
agree on the means of public involvement & methods of analysis
identify the main issues & impacts to be studied
consider feasible & practical alternatives
establish ‘Terms of Reference’ for the EIA
Consideration of alternatives
demand alternatives
supply or input alternatives
activity alternatives
location alternatives
process alternatives
scheduling alternatives
Who should be involved in scoping?
o proponent
o EIA consultant
o supervisory authority for EIA
o other responsible agencies
o affected public
o interested public
EIA ‘ToR’ to be included in outline
Study area and boundaries
Alternatives to be examined
impacts and issues to be studied
approach to be taken
requirements for mitigation and monitoring
information and data to be included in the EIA report
timetable and requirements for completion of the EIA process
opportunities for wider public involvement
Screening and scoping compared
Screening
Determines the requirement for EIA
Establishes the level of review necessary
Scoping
Identifies the key issues and impacts
Establishes the Terms of Reference
REVIEW
Goals of an EIA review
The purpose of the review process is to:
establish if the information in an EIA report is
sufficient for decision-making.
Key objectives are to:
Review the quality of the EIA report.
Take public comments into account.
Determine if the information is sufficient.
Identify any deficiencies to be corrected
Considerations during an EIA review
The review complies with terms of reference for the EIA Report.
Information is correct and technically sound.
Public comments are taken into account.
There is a complete and satisfactory statement of key findings
Information is clear and understandable.
Information is sufficient for decision-making.
EIA review types
Internal review
Features:
low operating costs
can lack rigour and transparency
often no documentation of result.
External review
Features:
independent, expert check on EIA quality
more rigorous and transparent
report on sufficiency or deficiency
Formal Review of EIA Reports
7- 20 working days to declare if the EIA Report meets the
requirements of the laws or whether it needs additional
information.
Series Review Guidelines are prepared to assist Environmental
Protection Agencies in considering the adequacy of EIA reports.
The EIA Report is checked against the terms established during
scoping, which includes public participation.
Lecture-5
MONITORING
Why is monitoring needed?
Monitoring is an essential but
neglected component of EIA
implementation & follow up.
Other components include
supervision, auditing & ex-post evaluation.
Aims of monitoring
Ensure the implementation of conditions attached to a
decision.
Verify that impacts are as predicted or permitted.
Confirm that mitigation measures are working as
expected.
Take action to manage any unforeseen changes
When is monitoring needed?
Monitoring and auditing should be undertaken when:
potential impacts are significant or uncertain; and/or
mitigation measures are untried and outcomes
uncertain.
Key components of monitoring
Establish baseline conditions.
Measure impacts of a project as constructed.
Verify conformity with established with conditions and
acceptable limits.
Establish links to environmental management plans.
Carry out periodic checks and third-party audits.
Design considerations of EIA monitoring
What is required?
Identify the scope and components.
Who will carry out the activities?
Specify roles and responsibilities.
How will these be implemented?
Allocate resources.
Define procedures and arrangements.
Who can access outcomes of monitoring?
Only decision-maker and the wider public may access monitoring
outcomes.
Purposes of EIA
1. An aid to decision-making
• EIA is a process with several important purposes.
• It is an aid to decision-making.
• For the decision-maker it provides a systematic examination of the
environmental implications of a proposed action, program or project and
sometimes alternatives, before a decision is taken.
2. An instrument for sustainable development (SD)
• SD is the central and ultimate role of EIA as one of the instruments to achieve
sustainable development: “development that does not cost the Earth”
• Existing environmentally harmful developments have to be managed as best
they can.
Impact Analysis
The 'impact analysis'
It is the detailed study phase of EIA which involves
identifying the impacts more specifically
predicting the characteristics of the main impacts
evaluating the significance of the residual impact
The term ‘environment’ encompasses
human health and safety
flora, fauna, ecosystems and biodiversity
soil, water, air, climate and landscape
use of land, natural resources and raw materials
protected areas and sites of special significance
heritage, recreation and amenity assets
livelihood, lifestyle and well being of affected communities
Methods for identifying environmental impacts
checklists
matrices
networks
overlays & geographical information systems (GIS)
expert systems
professional judgement
Example of a checklist
For Water Supply and Sanitation Projects
Aspects of EIA Checkli st Questi ons Yes No Addi tional
Wi ll the pr oject: Data needs
Sour ces of I mpacts 1. Require t he acquis it ion or c onv ers ion of s ignificant areas
of land for res erv oir/t reatment work s etc . (e.g. > 50 ha
rural, > 5 ha urban)?
2. Res ult in s ignific ant quantities of eroded material, effluent
or s olid was tes ?
3. Require s ignific ant ac c ommodation or s erv ic e amenities to
s upport t he work forc e during c ons truc tion (eg > 100
manual work ers )?
Receptor s of Impacts 4. Flood or otherwis e affec t areas which support
c ons erv ation worthy terrest rial or aquatic ec osy st ems ,
flora or fauna (eg protec ted areas , wilderness areas ,
fores t res erv es , c rit ic al habit ats , endangered s pec ies ); or
that cont ain s ites of his torical or cultural import anc e?
5. Flood or otherwis e affec t areas which will affec t the
liv elihoods of loc al people (eg require populat ion
res ettlement ; affec t loc al indus t ry, agric ult ure, liv est oc k
or f is h s t ock s ; reduc e the availability of natural resourc e
goods and s erv ic es )?
6. Inv olv e s iting s anit ation t reatment fac ilit ies c los e to
human s ett lements (part ic ularly where loc ations are
s usc ept ible to f looding)?
7. Affec t s ourc es of water ex trac t ion?
Envir onmental Impacts 8. Caus e a not ic eable permanent or s eas onal reduct ion in
the v olume of ground or s urf ac e water s upply ?
9. Pres ent a s ignific ant pollution risk through liquid or s olid
was t es to humans, s ourc es of water ex trac t ion,
c ons erv ation worthy aquatic ecos y s tems and s pec ies , or
c ommerc ial fis h s toc k s ?
10. Change t he loc al hy drology of s urfac e water-bodies (eg
s treams , riv ers , lak es ) suc h that c ons erv ation-worthy or
c ommerc ially s ignif ic ant f is h s toc ks are affec ted?
11. Inc reas e t he ris k of dis eas es in areas of high population
dens ity (eg onc hocerc ias is , filarias is, malaria, hepatit is ,
gast rointes tinal dis eas es )?
12. Induc e s ec ondary dev elopment, eg along acc es s roads ,
or in the form of ent repreneurial s ervic es for c ons truc t ion
and operational ac tiv it ies ?
Miti gation Measur es 13. Be lik ely to require mit igation meas ures that may res ult in
the projec t being financially or s ocially unac c ept able?
Comments
I r ecommend that the pr ogr amme be assigned to
Categor y
Signature: Delegation. .. ... .. .... ... ... .. ... ... .... ... ... .. ... Des k ... .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... .
Main advantages and disadvantages of impact identification methods
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Checkl i sts • simple to underst and • do not di sti ngui sh
–si mpl e and use bet ween di rect and
–ranki ng • go od for si te sel ect i on i ndi rect i mp act s
and and priori ty set t i ng • do not l ink acti on and
wei ghting i mp act
• t he process of
i ncorpo rat i ng val ues
can be cont roversial
Matrices • li nk acti o n t o i mp act • di ffi cult t o di st in gu ish
• go od met hod fo r di rect and i nd irect
di spl ayi n g EIA resul ts i mp acts
• sig ni fican t po t ent ial
for do ubl e-cou nt ing o f
i mp acts
Networks • li nk acti o n t o i mp act • can become very
• useful in si mpl i fi ed complex if used bey ond
fo rm for checki ng for simpl ifi ed v ersion
second o rder i mpact s
• han dles d irect an d
in di rect i mpact s
Overla ys • easy to u nderst and • address onl y di rect
• go od di spl ay met hod i mp acts
• go od sit i ng tool • do not address impact
durat i on or probabi l i ty
GIS and • excel l ent for i mp act • heavy rel ian ce on
computer id ent i ficati on and kno wledge an d d ata
expert anal ysi s • oft en comp lex and
systems
• go od for ‘experi ment in g’ expen si ve
Impact characteristics can vary in
nature (positive/negative, direct/indirect)
magnitude (severe, moderate, low)
extent/location (area/volume covered, distribution)
timing (during construction, operation etc, immediate, delayed)
duration (short term/long term, intermittent/continuous)
reversibility/irreversibility
likelihood (probability, uncertainty)
significance (local, regional, global)
Impact characteristic summary table
IMPACT TYPE
IMPACT
air quality health etc
CHARACTERISTIC
nature
magnitude
extent/location
timing
duration
reversibility
likelihood (risk)
significance
Health impacts
Examples of health impacts by sector
Communicable Non Nutrition Injury Psychosocial
disease communicable disorder and
disease loss of well-
being
Mining Tuberculosis Dust induced Crushing Labour migration
lung disease
Agriculture Parasitic Pesticide Loss of
infections poisoning subsistence
Industry Poisoning by Occupational Disempowerment
pollutants injury
Forestry Loss of food Occupational
production injury
Dams and Water borne Poisoning by Increased food Drowning Involuntary
irrigation diseases pollutants production displacement
schemes
Transportation HIV/Aids Heart disease Traffic injury Noise and
induced stress
Energy Indoor air Electromagnetic Community
pollution radiation displacement
Source: Birley, 2000
Factors affecting economic impacts
duration of construction and operation
workforce requirements for each period
skill requirements (local availability)
earning
raw material and other input purchases
capital investment
outputs
the characteristics of the local economy
MITIGATION
Purpose of mitigation
• Defined as “measures envisaged in order to avoid, reduce and, if
possible remedy significant adverse effects”.
A measure before any problem/impact occurs.
find better ways of doing things
to avoid, minimise or remedy adverse impacts
to ensure that residual impacts are within acceptable levels
to enhance environmental and social benefits
Proponents have a responsibility to:
o avoid, minimise and remedy adverse impacts
o internalise the environmental & social costs of the
proposal
o prepare plans for managing impacts
o repair or make compensation for environmental damages
Framework for impact mitigation
Common (desirable)
Alternative sites or
Avoidance technology to
eliminate habitat loss
Actions during
design, construction and
Mitigation operation to minimise
or eliminate habitat
loss
Used as a last resort
Compensation to of fset habitat loss
Rare (undesirable)
Impact avoidance can be achieved by:
not undertaking certain projects or elements
avoiding environmentally sensitive areas
use of measures to prevent impacts from occurring
site remediation bonds
resettlement plans
in kind measures and offsets
Impact compensation can be achieved by
rehabilitation of resource or environmental components
restoration of the site to its previous state
replacement of the environmental values lost at another
location
Public Participation
Public participation:- is the direct involvement/consultation of the
public in any devt activities, programs or policies.
This is to inform the public about these activities & include their
ideas/knowledge in those devt activities, programs or policies.
Purpose & objectives of public involvement
informing stakeholders
gaining their views, concerns and values
taking account of public inputs in decision making
influencing project design
obtaining local knowledge
Key stakeholders
local people affected by a proposal/activity, policy, program
proponent and project beneficiaries
government agencies
NGOs
others, e.g. donors, the private sector, academics
Public involvement in key stages of the EIA process
screening
determining the need for, and level, of EIA
scoping
identifying the key issues and alternatives
impact analysis
identifying the significant impacts and mitigating measures
review
commenting on/responding to the EIA report
implementation and monitoring
checking EIA follow up
Principles for successful application of public involvement techniques
provide the right information
allow sufficient time to review & respond
provide appropriate opportunities/means for stakeholder
involvement
respond issues & concerns raised
feed back the results of public input
choose venues and times of events to suit stakeholders
Principles for minimising conflict
involve all stakeholders
establish communication channels
describe the proposal & its objectives
listen to the concerns & interests of affected people
treat people fairly & impartially
be flexible
mitigate impacts & compensate for loss and damage
acknowledge concerns & provide feed-back.
Conclusion
EIA is an important tool to conduct a healthier construction & hence it should be included
in each construction activity once in which category the concerned activity is categorized
(EIA requiring, partial or not)
Therefore as a construction manager, do not forget to:
o “Consider EIA as part of environmental planning for any construction activity”.
Because EIA is a tool which helps to encourage positive impacts & discourage
negative impacts.
During Rural Road construction & provision:
Possible +ve impacts: facilitating transportation, economic devt, social devt,
Possible -ve impacts: Land degradation, Water resources pollution, Relocation of
residents, Forest destruction,
Hence, there is a need to include mitigation measures for the negative impacts.
Note: The EIA processes & procedures must be considered to prepare a sound EIA
document.
The EIA Guide lines can be obtained from the Ethiopian Environmental Protection
Authority or from its web-site.
Thank you