
Strategic Environmental Assessment in a Transition Country
Development of SEA Screening Criteria for Belarus
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Screening is the initial stage of strategic environmental assessment (SEA). Screening aims to answer if further application of SEA is needed. The procedure for SEA screening is defined in international documents (SEA Protocol and SEA Directive), however their provisions are very general and leave certain freedom of interpretation. The responsibility to develop SEA screening criteria and define it in national laws rests on each member-state. Screening approaches and types of screening systems vary greatly. There are experienced countries and there are states which are still in the beginning of ...
Screening is the initial stage of strategic
environmental assessment (SEA). Screening aims to
answer if further application of SEA is needed. The
procedure for SEA screening is defined in
international documents (SEA Protocol and SEA
Directive), however their provisions are very
general and leave certain freedom of
interpretation. The responsibility to develop SEA
screening criteria and define it in national laws
rests on each member-state. Screening approaches and
types of screening systems vary greatly. There are
experienced countries and there are states which
are still in the beginning of their way towards the
establishment of effective and efficient screening
system. Development of a screening system faces a
number of problems which are concluded mainly in
finding a proper balance between many concurent
factors. A frame SEA screening criteria which would
guide SEA system developers towards finding a
balance need to be developed. For this purpose
generic SEA screening criteria (GSSC) and a scheme
of their contextualization are developed in this
book and Belarus is chosen as a field of application
of GSSC-contextualization scheme.
environmental assessment (SEA). Screening aims to
answer if further application of SEA is needed. The
procedure for SEA screening is defined in
international documents (SEA Protocol and SEA
Directive), however their provisions are very
general and leave certain freedom of
interpretation. The responsibility to develop SEA
screening criteria and define it in national laws
rests on each member-state. Screening approaches and
types of screening systems vary greatly. There are
experienced countries and there are states which
are still in the beginning of their way towards the
establishment of effective and efficient screening
system. Development of a screening system faces a
number of problems which are concluded mainly in
finding a proper balance between many concurent
factors. A frame SEA screening criteria which would
guide SEA system developers towards finding a
balance need to be developed. For this purpose
generic SEA screening criteria (GSSC) and a scheme
of their contextualization are developed in this
book and Belarus is chosen as a field of application
of GSSC-contextualization scheme.