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Environmental engineering
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===Environmental impact assessment and mitigation=== {{Main|Environmental impact assessment}}[[File:Water pollution.jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|Water pollution]] Environmental engineers apply scientific and engineering principles to evaluate if there are likely to be any adverse impacts to water quality, air quality, [[habitat (ecology)|habitat]] quality, [[flora (plants)|flora]] and [[fauna (animals)|fauna]], agricultural capacity, [[traffic]], ecology, and noise. If impacts are expected, they then develop mitigation measures to limit or prevent such impacts. An example of a mitigation measure would be the creation of [[wetland]]s in a nearby location to mitigate the filling in of wetlands necessary for a road development if it is not possible to reroute the road. In the United States, the practice of environmental assessment was formally initiated on January 1, 1970, the effective date of the [[National Environmental Policy Act]] (NEPA). Since that time, more than 100 developing and developed nations either have planned specific analogous laws or have adopted procedure used elsewhere. NEPA is applicable to all federal agencies in the United States.<ref name="McGraw-Hill, Inc">{{cite book|title=McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering|url=https://archive.org/details/mcgrawhillencycl0000unse|url-access=registration|publisher=McGraw-Hill, Inc|year=1993|isbn=9780070513969 |edition=3rd}}</ref>
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