The environmental footprint of fixed industrial plants remains one of the core barriers to global sustainability. Although the current technology minimizes the footprint of such plants, the science tells us that the complete mitigation of such footprints is seldom possible.
However, current research suggests there are a handful of effective means of reducing these externalities. For instance, phytoremediation, utilizing plant life to absorb heavy metals like lead and mercury, can be used to revitalize soil around active as well as defunct industrial sites (Wang & Hao, 2024). Industrial parks themselves are increasingly embracing concepts like the circular economy and life cycle analysis to minimize waste and mitigate greenhouse gases throughout the life of a plant (Al-Rumaihi et al., 2020).
In the energy sector, Carbon Capture, Utilization, & Storage technologies paired with state-of-the-art noise analysis and vibration dampeners have already seen a reduction in externalities like community disturbance as well as atmospheric pollution at cement and petrochemical facilities (Hosen & Bărbulescu, 2026).
Despite the progress made, the total eradication of environmental impacts remains impossible for various reasons. To begin with, there is the problem of the rebound effect, where the increased efficiency leads to reduced resource use, thereby leading to increased production, thus offsetting the positive environmental impacts (Lowe et al., 2025). Another reason is the concept of the ‘pollution haven,’ where the imposition of regulations in certain environments leads to an increase in pollution in other environments (Dechezleprêtre & Sato, 2017).
Moreover, establishing static plants can have the unintended effects of disrupting hydrological processes and biodiversity in ways that cannot be reversed. For example, the intensive exploitation of groundwater for industrial purposes can result in the long-term alteration of the regimes of river flows, thereby creating long-term ecological stress that cannot be reversed (Kim et al., 2026).
In other words, fixed plants can minimize their environmental footprint significantly through the application of integrated approaches for pollution control and the circular economy concept, but cannot do so completely. The combination of market forces, environmental constraints, and resource-intensive production ensures that some level of environmental footprint will always exist.
References
Al-Rumaihi, A., McKay, G., Mackey, H. R., & Al-Ansari, T. (2020). Environmental Impact Assessment of Food Waste Management Using Two Composting Techniques. Sustainability, 12(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041595
Dechezleprêtre, A., & Sato, M. (2017). The Impacts of Environmental Regulations on Competitiveness. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 11(2), 183–206. https://doi.org/10.1093/reep/rex013
Hosen, K., & Bărbulescu, A. (2026). Cement Industry Pollution Mitigation: A Comprehensive Review on Reducing Environmental and Health Impacts. Toxics, 14(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020138
Kim, Y., Kim, W., Woo, S., Lee, Y., & Kim, S. (2026). Evaluation of Long-Term Increased Groundwater Abstraction Impact on Watershed Hydrology in Han River Basin, South Korea. Water, 18(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/w18050607
Lowe, B., Genovese, A., Vivanco, D. F., & Zink, T. (2025). Revisiting circular economy rebound: Market dynamics, policy implications, and future research directions. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 29(6), 1936–1945. https://doi.org/10/J%252520of%252520Industrial%252520Ecology%252520-%2525202025%252520-%252520Lowe%252520-%252520Revisiting%252520circular%252520economy%252520rebound%252520%252520Market%252520dynamics%252520%252520policy%252520implications%252520%252520and.pdf
Wang, S., & Hao, M. (2024). Plant communities and potential phytoremediation species for resource utilization of abandoned drilling mud. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2023.1302278

