When It Hurts So Good: How WNC Could Benefit Economically From Tackling Air Quality
Andrew Jones
© Sustainability Institute
January 6, 2002
Andrew Jones lives in Asheville and works with Sustainability Institute www.sustainabilityinstitute.org . He can be reached at apjones@sustainer.org. This opinion column appeared in the Asheville (North Carolina) Citizen-Times.
|
A monument to the boll weevil stands in Enterprise, Alabamas town square. It is a robed, Statue of Liberty look-alike holding an enormous black bug over its head. The statues head is bowed in somber respect. The boll weevil ravaged 60 percent of the regions cotton crop in 1915, and even more the next year, decimating livelihoods and towns. Yet, the inscription on the monuments base says, "In Profound Appreciation of the Boll Weevil and What It Has Done as the Herald of Prosperity." The herald of prosperity? The boll weevil?! In 1917, with their economy and society almost destroyed, the down-and-out farmers of South Alabama were forced to adjust and innovate. Over the next few years, they began diversifying into peanuts and other crops and no longer depended so heavily on cotton. The regions swift entry into the agricultural revolution of the times helped it thrive when other areas of the South, primarily dependent on cotton, continued to suffer. So several years after hitting bottom, area leaders erected the monument as "a symbol to mans willingness and ability to adjust to adversity." The boll weevil story has a lesson for Asheville: sometimes tackling a big problem head-on can yield extensive, surprising improvements in the long-term. Poor and declining air quality is Ashevilles current big problem our boll weevil. And committing ourselves to tackle it (for example, via the "early action compact" we recently made with the Environmental Protection Agency) could bring benefits we may not anticipate. Consider the N.C. Clean Smokestacks Act, which will push energy utilities to clean the emissions of fourteen North Carolina coal-fired power plants. Besides improving air quality, the $2.3 billion spent on know-how and technologies will likely boost the development of the states (and possibly, our regions) environmental technology industry for example, by creating or expanding environmental engineering firms, consulting wings of energy utilities, manufacturers, and skilled construction crews. The resulting cluster of businesses could serve other states as they work to catch up with North Carolinas utilities. |
![]() |
Now lets think what else we would be doing if we treated our declining air quality as seriously as the Enterprise farmers had to treat the boll weevil and consider other likely benefits.
The Enterprise farmers learned (the hard way) that crop diversity creates economic resilience. Here in Asheville, poor air quality is teaching us another lesson: cutting waste, avoiding pollution, finding sustainable sources of energy, and staying abreast of business trends these are good principles for a healthy economy and not just clean air. Who knows, maybe some day well follow the lead of the Enterprise farmers and put up a monument in Pack Square to our regions unlikely "Heralds of Prosperity" haze, ozone and smog.
Sustainability Institute: Home