Why the world is looking to the Philippines for climate justice


(MENAFN- The Conversation) Corporations and governments around the world increasingly stand accused of causing or failing to prevent the damaging effects of climate change. are being filed in many countries to establish who is responsible and what action should be taken.

In 2016, after a series of hit the Philippines, a group of Filipino citizens and civil organisations, including Greenpeace, 47 corporations of having significantly contributed to climate change, and called for them to be held accountable. Dubbed the ', these included the likes of Shell, BP and Chevron.

The group asked the to investigate the Carbon Majors' responsibility for alleged breaches of Filipinos' human rights to 'life, health, food, water, sanitation, adequate housing and self determination' that are associated with climate change.

The Carbon Majors bases its claims on a by climate expert which attributes 'the lion's share of cumulative global CO2 and methane emissions since the industrial revolution' to the world's largest producers of crude oil, natural gas, coal and cement.

The Philippines Human Rights Commission is investigating a petition against 47 multinational corporations, dubbed the Carbon Majors, for having significantly contributed to climate change that has caused devastation in the country. Taking on the big guns

In an unprecedented move, in December 2017, the Commission agreed to the Carbon Majors petition. Its powers are relatively modest: the Commission can only make recommendations to the Filipino authorities and those found to have breached human rights, but it cannot award damages and it has no enforcement powers. Still, its decision could be a game changer for climate change litigation.

In 2005, a group of Inuit the to assert the United States' responsibility for human rights violations associated with climate change in the Arctic. But the petition was dismissed on procedural grounds. So what has changed since then?

In recent years, a long string of United Nations Human Rights Council resolutions has the role of human rights in tackling climate change. The most recent international climate change treaty – the – explicitly links human rights and the obligations of climate change law. These developments seem to have emboldened efforts to use human rights law as a means to tackle climate change.

Far from being an isolated complaint, the Carbon Majors petition is part of a global in climate change litigation. Yet, there are complex legal obstacles to attributing responsibility for breaches of human rights caused by climate change.

First, applicants have to demonstrate that the obligations of corporations encompass human rights violations associated with the adverse effects of climate change. Second, they have to prove that a specific corporation has contributed to climate change, in such a way that amounts to a breach of human rights.

But a balance has to be struck between environmental protection and other legitimate interests, such as providing energy for consumers. However, John Knox, the on human rights and the environment, has pointed out that this cannot result in unjustified, foreseeable breaches of human rights. He has also that improved scientific knowledge, such as that used to identify the Carbon Majors, has made it easier to trace the links between particular emissions and resulting harm.

Campaigners believe that climate change caused by the Carbon Majors is breaching the rights of Filipino people to basics such as food, water and shelter whenever a typhoon strikes and destroys entire communities. A petition for justice

All of these elements come together in the Carbon Majors petition, which concerns harm caused by corporations that was largely foreseeable. Recent suggests that corporations have long known about climate change and its likely consequences, but have failed to act on it.

So the petition can be likened to for harm caused by smoking tobacco or by driving cars. Before successful court cases were brought, liability for either of these hazardous activities was hard to establish. It was only when courts started to attribute responsibility that victims were provided with redress, and dedicated insurance schemes and liability regimes were created.

The decision of the Philippines Human Rights Commission to investigate the Carbon Majors petition is, then, potentially revolutionary. In 2018, the Commission will carry out a series of fact-finding in the Philippines, London and New York to establish whether multinational corporations can be held responsible for human rights violations associated with climate change and, if so, recommend ways to mitigate them.

Far from being a symbolic gesture, this acknowledgement of multinationals' role in causing climate change would be a primer, and could potentially spark a domino effect in climate change litigation elsewhere.

Corporations are already being in the US, where the cities of New York and San Francisco are seeking to hold the world's biggest oil companies responsible for present and future damage caused by climate change.

All eyes are now on the Philippines to see what conclusions its Human Rights Commission will draw; for many, it has already by deciding to investigate the Carbon Majors petition in the first place.


The Conversation

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