The EU Parliament’s proposal for a Regulation on Forest and Ecosystem Risk Commodities - Tackling global deforestation though due diligence - By Enrico Partiti

Editor's note: Enrico Partiti is Assistant Professor of Transnational Regulation and Governance at Tilburg University and Associate Fellow at the Asser Institute. His expertise centres on European and international economic law, sustainability and supply chain regulation. In particular, he studies how private standard-setters and corporations regulate globally sustainability and human rights 


Upcoming Event: Fighting global deforestation through due diligence: towards an EU regulation on forest and ecosystem risk commodities? - 4 November 2020 - 16:00 (CET) - Register Here!


The recent vote in the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety (ENVI) Committee of the European Parliament on binding legislation to stop EU-driven global deforestation is a watershed moment in the global fight against deforestation, ecosystem conversion and associated human rights violations. The ENVI Committee report, that will soon be voted by the plenary, requests the Commission (as provided in Art. 225 TFEU) to table a legislative proposal for a measure disciplining the placing on the EU market of products associated to forest and ecosystem conversion and degradation, as well as violations of indigenous communities’ human rights. The Parliament’s initiative takes place in a policy context increasingly concerned with deforestation, in the framework of a Commission Communication on stepping up EU action to protect and restore the world’s forests which left a door open for legislative intervention. 

The proposed measure would aim to severe the economic link between demand of agricultural commodities, especially by large consumers markets, and negative environmental impacts - including on climate change. Beef, soy and palm oil alone are responsible for 80% of tropical deforestation, and consequent CO2 emissions. In 2014, EU demand was responsible for 41% of global imports of beef, 25% of palm oil and 15% of soy, as well as large shares of other commodities at high risk for forests and ecosystems such as such as maize (30%), cocoa (80%), coffee (60%), and rubber (25%). Protecting just forests is not sufficient, as it risks to displace conversion to other non-forests ecosystems such as the Brazilian cerrado. In light of their negative impact on both forests and other natural ecosystems, such commodities have been labeled as forest and ecosystem risks commodities (FERCs). More...





New Event! Fighting global deforestation through due diligence: towards an EU regulation on forest and ecosystem risk commodities? - 4 November 2020 - 16:00 (CET)

Between 2010 and 2015, 7.6 million hectares of forests were lost every year. Deforestation not only causes immense biodiversity loss, but it also has extremely negative repercussions on climate change. Hence, deforestation is one of the world’s most pressing global challenges. 

This online event will discuss the EU Parliament’s new initiative to tackle deforestation. It will examine the initiative’s substance, possible implications for fighting deforestation across the globe, and possible means for enforcement and their challenges, as well as its impact on EU obligations under international (trade) law.

Background

Research has shown that agricultural production is a major driver of deforestation. The majority of global tree cover loss between 2000 and 2015 was caused by agricultural production, and another quarter was due to forestry activities. Furthermore, a large proportion of forest clearance occurs in breach of local legal and administrative requirements. However, only half of the total tropical deforestation between 2000 and 2012 was caused by illegal conversion. Weak enforcement of forest laws in certain countries further compounds the problem of relying on legality as a meaningful threshold to stop conversion for agricultural purposes, especially where political leaders wilfully reduce law enforcement and conservation efforts to favour agribusiness. 

To tackle these closely intertwined concerns, the EU is in the process of enhancing its policies on global deforestation linked to EU imports. In addition to the existent Timber Regulation, assessing the legality of timber origin, and the Renewable Energy Directive, establishing sustainability requirements for biofuel crops, the EU is considering several regulatory and non-regulatory interventions. Among the most profound measures, the EU Parliament is about to approve a ground-breaking Resolution that will require the Commission to propose an EU Regulation ensuring that only agricultural commodities and derived products that are not linked to deforestation, ecosystem conversion and associated human rights violations are marketed in the EU. Building on the Timber Regulation and human rights due diligence responsibilities as prescribed in the United Nation Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the proposal would require economic operators to implement the obligation via non-financial due diligence ensuring that products do not originate from converted forests and ecosystems, regardless of the legality of land-use conversion.

Speakers

  • Delara Burkhardt, European Parliament’s Rapporteur for a Motion for an EU Parliament Resolution with recommendations to the Commission on an EU legal framework to halt and reverse EU-driven global deforestation (her draft report is available here).

  • Andrea Carta, Senior legal strategist at Greenpeace, EU Unit

  • Enrico Partiti, Assistant professor in transnational regulation and governance, Tilburg University

  • Meriam Wortel, Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority

The discussion will be moderated by Antoine Duval, Senior researcher at the Asser Institute and coordinator of the ‘Doing business right’ project. 

Click here to register for this online discussion.

Corporate (Ir)Responsibility Made in Germany - Part II: The Unfinished Saga of the Lieferkettengesetz - By Mercedes Hering

Editor's note: Mercedes is a recent graduate of the LL.B. dual-degree programme English and German Law, which is taught jointly by University College London (UCL) and the University of Cologne. She will sit the German state exam in early 2022. Alongside her studies, she is working as student research assistant at the Institute for International and Foreign Private Law in Cologne. Since September 2020, she joined the Asser Institute as a research intern for the Doing Business Right project.

In Part II of this blog series, I intend to outline the different proposals for a Lieferkettengesetz. First, the Initiative Lieferkettengesetz’s model law, secondly the proposal submitted by the Ministry for Labour and Social Affairs and the Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, and lastly, I will present the amendments pushed by the business sector and the Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy.More...

New Event! Kiobel in The Hague - Holding Shell Accountable in the Dutch courts - 16 October 2020 - 4-5 Pm (CET)

On Friday, 16 October, from 16.00-17.00, we will organise an online discussion about the Kiobel v. Shell case, currently before Dutch courts in the Hague. The discussion will retrace the trajectory followed by the case in reaching The Hague, explain the arguments raised by both parties in the proceedings, and assess the potential relevance of the future ruling for the wider debate on corporate accountability/liability for human rights violations. 


Background

In 1995, nine local activists from the Ogoniland region of Nigeria (the Ogoni nine) were executed by the Nigerian authorities, then under the military dictatorship of General Sani Abacha. They were protesting against the widespread pollution stemming from the exploitation of local oil resources by a Nigerian subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell when they were arrested and found guilty of murder in a sham trial. Their deaths led first to a series of complaints against Royal Dutch Shell in the United States on the basis of the alien tort statute (ATS). One of them, lodged by Esther Kiobel, the wife of one of those killed (Dr Barinem Kiobel), reached the US Supreme Court. Famously, the Court decided to curtail the application of the ATS in situations that do not sufficiently 'touch and concern' the territory of the United States.

This ruling put an end to Esther Kiobel's US lawsuit, but it did not stop her, together with three other widows (Victoria Bera, Blessing Eawo and Charity Levula), from seeking to hold the multinational company accountable for its alleged involvement in the deaths of their husbands. Instead, in 2017, they decided to continue their quest for justice on Royal Dutch Shell’s home turf, before Dutch courts in The Hague. 25 years after the death of the Ogoni nine, the court in The Hague just finished hearing the pleas of the parties and will render its much-awaited decision in the coming months.


Confirmed speakers

  • Tom de Boer (Human rights lawyer representing the claimants, Prakken d'Oliveira)  
  • Lucas Roorda (Utrecht University)
  • Tara van Ho (Essex University) 
  • Antoine Duval, Senior researcher at the T.M.C Asser Instituut, will moderate the discussion 


 Register here to join the discussion on Friday.

Corporate (Ir)responsibility made in Germany - Part I: The National (In)Action Plan 2016-2020 - By Mercedes Hering

Editor's note: Mercedes is a recent graduate of the LL.B. dual-degree programme English and German Law, which is taught jointly by University College London (UCL) and the University of Cologne. She will sit the German state exam in early 2022. Alongside her studies, she is working as student research assistant at the Institute for International and Foreign Private Law in Cologne. Since September 2020, she joined the Asser Institute as a research intern for the Doing Business Right project.


On the international stage, Germany presents itself as a champion for human rights and the environment. However, as this blog will show, when it comes to holding its own corporations accountable for human rights violations and environmental damage occurring within their global supply chains, it shows quite a different face.

In recent years, German companies were linked to various human rights scandals. The German public debate on corporate accountability kickstarted in earnest in September 2012, when a factory in Karachi, Pakistan, burned down killing almost 300 people. The factory had supplied KiK, Germany’s largest discount textile retailer with cheap garments. Then, over a year and a half ago, a dam broke in Brazil, killing 257 people. The dam had previously been certified to be safe by TÜV Süd Brazil, a subsidiary of TÜV Süd, a German company offering auditing and certification services. There are many more examples of incidents in which German companies were involved in human rights violations occurring within their supply chains, yet eight years after the factory in Pakistan burned down, and nine years after the unanimous endorsement of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights by the UN Human Rights Council, there is still no binding German legislation imposing some type of liability onto companies that knowingly, or at least negligently, fail to uphold human and labor rights in their supply chain.

This is despite the fact that Germany, the third-largest importer worldwide, with its economic power and negotiation strength on the international stage, could have a dramatic impact on business practices if it were to embrace a stronger approach to business and human rights.  

In the coming two blogs I am to take a critical look at Germany’s recent policies related to corporate accountability and discuss the current developments (and roadblocks) linked to the potential adoption of a Lieferkettengesetz (Supply Chain Law). In this first post, I focus on the effects of the National Action Plan 2016-2020, building on recently released interim reports. In my second blog, I will then turn to the various proposals and political discussions for mandatory due diligence regulation (Lieferkettengesetz).More...


Tackling Worker Exploitation by ‘Gangmasters’ in the UK and Australia - Part 1: An Overview of Labour Hire Licensing Laws in the UK and Australia – By Katharine Booth

Editor’s note: Katharine Booth holds a LLM, Advanced Programme in European and International Human Rights Law from Leiden University, Netherlands and a LLB and BA from the University of New South Wales, Australia. She is currently working at the Asser Institute in The Hague. She previously worked as a lawyer and for a Supreme Court Justice in Australia.

 

This series of blog posts focuses on the regulation of so-called ‘gangmasters’ in the UK and Australia. A ‘gangmaster’ is an old English term for a person (an individual or business) who organises or supplies a worker to do work for another person.[1] Gangmasters have been described as ‘middlemen’ or ‘brokers’ between a worker and a business that needs temporary, and often seasonal, labour. In other countries, including Australia, gangmasters are commonly referred to as labour hire providers or labour market intermediaries.

In recent years, legislation has been implemented in the UK and three Australian States (Queensland, Victoria and South Australia) requiring gangmasters to be licensed. According to Judy Fudge and Kendra Strauss, central to these licensing schemes is the protection of vulnerable workers from forced and unfree labour and exploitation:

“[E]vidence suggests that ‘sweating’ at the bottom end of the labour market (increasingly populated by migrant workers, both documented and undocumented, in many countries) often involves labour intermediaries who exploit the ways in which processes of racialization and the construction of new categories of social difference, instigated by immigration regimes, render some workers extremely vulnerable—including to forced and unfree labour.”

As noted by Kendra Strauss, migrant workers are especially vulnerable to exploitation as they often migrate from less developed economies, have a precarious migrant status, and are employed in poorly-paid positions. They often lack English language skills and have little knowledge of their legal entitlements and pathways for accessing remedies which, according to an Oxfam GB report, makes it unlikely that they will report abuse or exploitation, for fear of losing their jobs. Moreover, as Sayomi Ariyawansa explains, the three-tiered or tripartite arrangement between the worker, gangmaster and host business means that there is no direct contractual relationship between the worker and host business and little oversight of the legal arrangements between the worker and gangmaster. This makes it easy for unscrupulous gangmasters to slip through legal cracks, but also for businesses to unknowingly enter into arrangements with gangmasters that do not comply with the law.

This series of blog posts explores the connection between the regulation of gangmasters and the enactment of modern slavery legislation, namely legislation calling on companies to report on modern slavery and other labour and human rights abuses in their corporate supply chains. It is divided into four main parts. Part 1 of this series explores two main issues. (1) The circumstances that led to the enactment of gangmaster licensing schemes in the UK and Australia, and the laws’ provisions relating to the licensing of workers. (2) The limitations of these laws, particularly the inability of licensing schemes to hold liable companies that enter into business arrangements with gangmasters, as well as companies higher in the supply chain. Part 2 explores reform of these laws in the UK and Australia in view of the relatively recent modern slavery legislation implemented in both countries.More...

Tackling Worker Exploitation by ‘Gangmasters’ in the UK and Australia - Part 2: From Labour Hire Licensing to Modern Slavery Laws – By Katharine Booth

Editor’s note: Katharine Booth holds a LLM, Advanced Programme in European and International Human Rights Law from Leiden University, Netherlands and a LLB and BA from the University of New South Wales, Australia. She is currently working at the Asser Institute in The Hague. She previously worked as a lawyer and for a Supreme Court Justice in Australia.


Both the UK and Australia have enacted legislation regulating the activities of ‘gangmasters’ or labour hire providers. Part 1 of this series of blog posts examines the circumstances that led to the enactment of labour hire licensing schemes in both the UK and Australia, and some key limitations of these laws.  Part 2 explores two issues closely connected to the business and human rights context. (1) Reform (in the UK) and potential reform (in Australia) of these laws in light of the increasing national and international recognition of modern slavery, human trafficking, labour exploitation and other human rights violations in corporate supply chains. Both the UK and Australia have enacted ‘modern slavery laws’ requiring certain companies to publish annual statements addressing human rights violations in their operations and supply chains. At the same time as the introduction of the UK Modern Slavery Act, the relevant gangmasters licensing authority (the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA)) was empowered with broad ‘police-like’ powers to investigate offences under that Act. These powers have shifted the authority’s focus from the passive regulation of the gangmasters licensing scheme to the active enforcement of compliance with the Modern Slavery Act. (2) However, as currently enacted, modern slavery laws are not perfect. A key criticism of these laws is that they do not impose strong enforcement mechanisms (particularly financial penalties) on companies that fail to comply with their provisions. The imposition of penalties is central to ensuring that companies take note of the importance of eliminating slavery from their supply chains. More...


A ‘Significant’ and ‘Concrete’ Step Forward? UN Releases Database of Businesses Linked to Israeli Settlements in the OPT - By Katharine Booth

Editor’s note: Katharine Booth holds a LLM, Advanced Programme in European and International Human Rights Law from Leiden University, Netherlands and a LLB and BA from the University of New South Wales, Australia. She is currently working with the Asser Institute in The Hague. She previously worked for a Supreme Court Justice and as lawyer in Australia.

 

Overview

On 12 February 2020, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (Commissioner) issued a report on all business enterprises involved in certain activities relating to Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) (Report). The Report contains a database of 112 businesses that the Commissioner has reasonable grounds to conclude have been involved in certain activities in Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Of the businesses listed, 94 are domiciled in Israel and the remaining 18 in 6 other countries: France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Thailand, the UK and the US. Many of the latter are household names in digital tourism, such as Airbnb, Booking, Expedia, Opodo and TripAdvisor, as well as Motorola. More...

New Event! Between National Law(s) and the Binding Treaty: Recent Developments in Business and Human Rights Regulation - 14 November

This event co-organised with FIDH and SOMO aims to provide a detailed overview of the latest developments in the field of BHR regulation. The first part of the afternoon will be dedicated to a comparative review of some national developments in BHR regulation. The speakers have been asked to focus their presentations (max 10 minutes) on outlining the recent (and sometimes future) changes in the various regulatory models introduced by specific European states. They will also discuss the (expected) effects of the different regulatory models based on comparative analyses and empirical data gathered so far.

The second part of the afternoon will then focus on discussing the latest draft of the proposed binding treaty on BHR. The speakers have been asked to prepare short presentations (max 10 minutes) on the strengths and weaknesses of the current draft (with an eye on the changes introduced with regard to the Zero draft). The presentations will be followed by open exchanges with the participants on the various points raised (including concrete proposals for improvement).


Where: Asser Institute in The Hague

When: 14 November from 13:00


Draft programme: 

13:00 – 13:15 Welcome

13:15 – 15:00 - BHR regulation: Recent Developments in Europe – Chair Maddalena Neglia (FIDH)

  • Nadia Bernaz (Wageningen University) – Recent developments in the UK
  • Anna Beckers (Maastricht University) – Recent developments in Germany
  • Antoine Duval (Asser Institute) – Recent developments in France
  • Lucas Roorda (Utrecht University/College voor de Rechten van de Mens) – Recent developments in the Netherlands
  • Irene Pietropaoli (British Institute of International and Comparative Law) – Recent developments in BHR regulation: A comparative perspective

15:00 – 15:15 Coffee Break 

15:15 – 17:00 – Revised Draft of the Binding BHR Treaty: Strengths and weaknesses – Chair Mariëtte van Huijstee (SOMO)

  • Nadia Bernaz (Wageningen University)
  • Anna Beckers (Maastricht University)
  • Antoine Duval (Asser Institute)
  • Irene Pietropaoli (British Institute of International and Comparative Law)
  • Lucas Roorda (Utrecht University/ College voor de Rechten van de Mens)

17:00 -  Closing Reception.


This event is organised with the support of:

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Doing Business Right – Monthly Report – July & August 2019 - By Maisie Biggs

Editor's note: Maisie Biggs graduated with a MSc in Global Crime, Justice and Security from the University of Edinburgh and holds a LLB from University College London. She is currently working with the Asser Institute in The Hague. She has previously worked for International Justice Mission in South Asia and the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO) in Amsterdam.

 

Introduction

This report compiles all relevant news, events and materials on Doing Business Right based on the coverage provided on our twitter feed @DoinBizRight and on various websites. You are invited to contribute to this compilation via the comments section below, feel free to add links to important cases, documents and articles we may have overlooked.

 

The Headlines

Revised Draft of Treaty on Human Rights and TNCs has been published

The Revised Draft has been released here by the Permanent Mission of Ecuador. The Draft comes ahead of the intergovernmental negotiations to be held at the 5th session of Open-Ended Intergovernmental Working Group on transnational corporations and other business enterprises with respect to human rights (OEIGWG). For further comment and context, see Larry Catá Backer's blog, the BHRRC's debate the treaty section on the revised draft, as well as the BHRJ Blog's series on the revised draft.

Business Roundtable redefined the group’s Purpose of a Corporation 

A prominent group of business leaders has redefined its purpose of a corporation to include stakeholder interests. In a statement signed by 181 CEO members of the Business Roundtable, an American group of business leaders, the statement of “the purpose of a corporation” has been altered from the long-standing commitment to shareholder primacy, to a broader ‘Commitment to All Stakeholders’. The change was announced in an advertisement in the Wall Street Journal and signed by 181 members, including the business leaders of Amazon, American Airlines, Bank of America, Coca-Cola, Marriott, Lockheed Martin, Morgan Stanley, UPS, and Walmart.

Chairman of Business Roundtable and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, explained in the release: “The American dream is alive, but fraying. Major employers are investing in their workers and communities because they know it is the only way to be successful over the long term. These modernized principles reflect the business community’s unwavering commitment to continue to push for an economy that serves all Americans.”

This reconceptualisation of the purpose of corporations has been met with cautious enthusiasm; however, the statement has no bearing on the legal obligations of the signatories, and whether this materially alters business conduct by the signatories’ companies is yet to be seen.

The ‘Business Roundtable Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation’ can be found here.

UK Supreme Court to hear Okpabi case against Shell

The Supreme Court has granted permission for Nigerian communities to appeal their case concerning environmental degradation against Royal Dutch Shell. Previously the Court of Appeals rejected jurisdiction for the claimants, however the Court’s reasoning was fundamentally undermined by the subsequent Supreme Court judgement in Vedanta. See our previous post here concerning how these cases are related, and how Vedanta has paved the way for jurisdiction to be found in the Okpabi case. See the statement by Leigh Day, working with the appellants, here.

In another case concerning the liability of a UK parent company for harms perpetrated abroad by a subsidiary that hinged on jurisdiction, the Supreme Court refused permission in AAA v Unilever PLC for Unilever subsidiary employees to appeal. Leigh Day have announced they will now move to file cases with the UN Working Group and the OECD.

Samsung France indicted for deceptive commercial practices for not abiding by CSR statements

NGOs Sherpa and ActionAid France have successfully obtained an indictment against Samsung France for deceptive commercial practices. Preliminary charges were lodged in April by a Paris investigating magistrate in the first French case in which ethical commitments have been recognised as likely to constitute commercial practice.

The organisations argue that public ethical commitments by Samsung to workers' rights were misleading, citing alleged labour abuses and child labour in factories in China, South Korea and Vietnam. The case represents a novel approach to litigating extraterritorial business human rights abuses; even in the aforementioned Vedanta case in the UK, there was a similar (brief) suggestion that CSR-style public commitments could be actionable.

Guatemalan shooting victims announce settlement with Pan American Silver in Canada

It has been announced that landmark 2017 Canadian case Garcia v. Tahoe Resources has been resolved between the parties. The case concerned remedy for 2013 shooting of protesters by Tahoe Resources mine security on April 27, 2013 outside Tahoe’s Escobal Mine in south-east Guatemala. The resolution included a public apology from Pan American Silver, who acquired Tahoe Resources earlier this year, while other terms of the settlement remain confidential. Settlements were reached with three of the claimants earlier, but the remaining four only settled on 30 July when PAS issued a public apology and acknowledgement of the violation of their human rights by Tahoe.

In 2017, the BC Court of Appeal confirmed jurisdiction over the case in Canada, finding that the “highly politicized environment” surrounding the mine meant that there was a “real risk” that the plaintiffs would not obtain justice in Guatemala, permitting the claimants to use the Canadian forum. The head of security for the mine is also facing criminal proceedings in Guatemala.

Remedy being reached has led to celebration from commentators, however no further legal precedent has been set than that from the 2017 appeal, so it might have limited value for future claimants. It has been surmised that settlement was reached because of the overwhelming evidence in the case: video footage from security cameras showed protestors being shot in the back as they fled the mine site.

See also: The GuardianBrazilian mining company to pay out £86m for disaster that killed almost 300 people and San Francisco ChronicleSuit alleging US chocolate makers collaborated in slave labor proceeds for US developments.

 More...


Doing Business Right Blog | The Ilva Case - Part 1: The Italian Chronicle of a Disaster Foretold - By Sara Martinetto

The Ilva Case - Part 1: The Italian Chronicle of a Disaster Foretold - By Sara Martinetto

Editor's note: Sara Martinetto is a research intern at the T.M.C. Asser Institute. She has recently completed her LLM in Public International Law at the University of Amsterdam. She holds interests in Migration Law, Criminal Law, Human Rights and European Law, with a special focus on their transnational dimension.


More than 11000 deaths and 25000 hospitalisations: the numbers divulged by the prosecution expert report assessing the human consequence of the operation of Ilva industries in the Italian city of Taranto are staggering. The environmental disaster caused by the plant brought the whole area to its knees and, in spite of all the efforts made, is still on-going. This is the story of a never-ending conflict. A conflict between different rights, which need to be balanced; between public authorities, who bear responsibility for ensuring and protecting those rights; between different normative levels and powers, given the numerous infringement proceedings opened by the EU Commission and the most recent claims lodged to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In the following sections I will try to shed some light on the main legal aspects of this tragic saga. For clarity, this article is divided in two posts: the first deals with the national level, while the second focuses on the supranational dimension of the case.


Factual and Legal Background

Ilva steel production has always been one of the cornerstones of Italy’s economy. The Taranto factory is the biggest steel plant in Europe and, in 2010, it counted more than 12.000 employees. It was a state-owned enterprise until 1995, when it was privatised and bought by the Riva family. It also acquired its liabilities: the negative impact of the plant on the environment had been, at the time, already acknowledged by the Italian Government. Indeed, the government had already conducted several investigations showing the existence of extensive air and water pollution, which required intervention on the sewage treatment plants. In particular, the high concentration of Dioxin was deemed to be worrisome, and extremely harmful for human health. In 1990, the Council of Ministers issued a Declaration pursuant to law 349 of 8 July 1986, stating that the Taranto area was “at risk of an environmental crisis”. Theoretically, this would have led to the drafting of a depollution plan; however, no authority meaningfully acted upon it, and the declaration was renewed in 1997. These documents have been incorporated in 1998 in a Presidential Decree which established the allocation of public and private funding for the clean-up for the plant.

In the meantime, an increasing environmental awareness led to the adoption – from the 90s onwards – of several legal instruments at the international, European and national level. Among others, one can recall the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development of 1992, Kyoto Protocol of 1997, the Aarhus Protocol and the Aarhus Convention of 1998. Particularly, the latter triggered a proliferation of European legislative action. Among the EU measures Council Directive 96/61/EC is particularly important.[1] Also known as the Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control (IPPC) Directive, it obliged public authorities to issue an authorisation for all the activities presenting an environmental risk. The release of such a permit is conditional on whether BATs (Best Available Techniques) are applied. In Italy, the Directive has been implemented only in 2005, by mean of a legislative decree; the permit released by the government pursuant to this act is known as AIA (‘integrated environmental authorization’). 

The drafting of this new body of legislation resulted in several reforms in Italian law, such as the adoption of the Environmental Code in 2006.  However, the domestic implementation of such instruments is lagging, and characterised by delays and misinterpretations. The inadequacy of the legal framework in place will appear clearly in the ensuing sections, which give an account of the many extraordinary measures taken in this case. It will be shown how a flawed normative framework, coupled with the Italian government’s resolution to keep the plant open and its consequent undermining of the measures taken by the judiciary, have allowed the situation to deteriorate for decades without ever coming close to a solution.  


The Regional Authorities

The public authorities of the Puglia Region have played a prominent role in the Ilva case. In particular, at the end of the 90s – beginning of 2000s, the Puglia regional authorities were invested by the government with special powers to tackle the environmental crisis. Thereby, they concluded several Memoranda of Understandings with the company, aimed at giving it the means to depollute the area and to start a clean production. These agreements do not have per se legal value, but they provide for a set of programmatic guidelines aimed at reducing polluting emissions. Notwithstanding the multiple rehabilitation plans drafted, the deadlines and prescriptions included in these instruments have not been respected, making these guidelines nothing more than dead letter.

In 2008, the Puglia Council adopted Regional Law 44, also called Anti-Dioxin Law, in an attempt to implement Council Decision 2004/259/EC.[2] However, the Government strongly opposed the timeframe indicated in the Law for depollution, and it ultimately managed to extend the deadline to 2010.[3] On 24 July 2012, the Region adopted a new Law to patch the situation in the Taranto area.[4] However, the tensions between branches of the State were already simmering. The judiciary wanted to stop production in order to prevent the continuation of a suspected environmental crime. While, the government was instead deeply concerned with the detrimental effects on the economy and on employment resulting from shutting down the plant.


The Italian court cases

The main legal proceeding on the Ilva case started in 2010, and was dubbed by the media as “Ambiente svenduto[5] to stress the continuous subordination of environmental considerations in favour of business goals. The peculiar aspect of this case lies both on the number of indicted persons, and on the charges pressed against them. Albeit some initial suspects have benefitted from expedite proceedings, the indictment still includes 44 persons (one legal person and 43 natural persons). The charges do not only cover environmental crimes and crimes against public safety, but the Prosecution made its case based on the existence of an extensive network of corruption and abuses for the benefits of the indicted companies. Indicted individuals range from lawyers, to experts, to public officials, who have allegedly worked to keep the plant operational, thereby putting their profits over the health of the local population. 

Moreover, Italian judicial authorities have initiated a series of other (smaller) proceedings involving the managing board of Ilva, both prior and after the initiation of this trial. For example, in 2005, Emilio Riva (the main owner of the plant) and Luigi Capogrosso (managing director) were condemned for the emission of dangerous substances.[6] This wrongdoing, provided for in art. 674 Italian Penal Code, is considered a misdemeanour.

'Ambiente svenduto'

In 2010, the Taranto Prosecutor’s Office opened an investigation on the alleged environmental damages caused by Ilva. The pre-trial phase saw the submission as evidence of two extensive expert reports (available here and here), documenting the high level of harmful emissions coming from the plant, and their correlation with the health hazards experienced by the local population. In particular, the reports show the appalling incidence of cancers, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases among Taranto citizens. 

On 25th July 2012, Taranto’s GIP (judge for preliminary investigations) issued a provisory order requesting the seizure of six sectors of the plant, due to the suspected environmental damage discovered. The seizure was taken as a precautionary measure and had the effect of suspending the activities carried out in those sectors. The measure was then confirmed by the Tribunale del Riesame (Review Tribunal for Precautionary Measures), which held that the installations could be used only for the purpose of facilitating the clean-up (see excerpts here). A few months later, the judge issued a new seizure on some goods produced by Ilva, since they were considered the result of illicit activity of the company. These judicial orders gave rise to conflicted opinions in the public, the company, and other political institutions. Indeed, the company was not the only actor to strongly oppose the measures: workers have been deeply torn by the issue, faced with the evidence of extensive pollution on one hand, and the fear of losing their jobs on the other. For its part, the Government took a set of measures, which will be discussed below, basically aimed at limiting the effects of such judicial acts, and at keeping the plant open. These seizure orders became a core element of contention, and made their way up to the Constitutional Court. Other seizures were upheld by lower courts, but subsequently overruled by the Corte di Cassazione (highest Italian court).[7] Thus, the Ilva plant stayed up and running, notwithstanding the damning evidence before the judges. 

Beside the controversies connected to precautionary measures, the “Ambiente svenduto” proceeding encountered several other hindrances. After the closure of the pre-trial phase, the file was passed on to the GUP (preliminary hearing judge). The Corte di Cassazione was seized again, and rejected the request to transfer the proceeding to another city, due to the intense pressure experienced in Taranto. Moreover, once the trial phase had started, the case was referred back to the GUP, due a procedural error. The trial phase has at the time of writing finally started. Nonetheless, the road to justice remains extremely lengthy and narrow. Victims have been waiting for a final judgement – and just in first instance – for seven years now.


The role of the Italian government before Opinion 85/2013

As mentioned above, the Italian government disagreed with the precautionary measures of the GIP, claiming that the judiciary was intervening in the definition of Italian industrial policy. Therefore, the Ministers of Environment, of Infrastructure, of Economic Development, together with the Heads of the Region, Province and the Mayor of Taranto signed a Memorandum of Understanding the day after the first order was issued. The idea was to find a compromise to proceed with the remediation of the site while safeguarding its employment level. Moreover, a couple of weeks later, the Government issued a Decree law, devolving funds for clean-up operations of the area.[8] Furthermore, on 26th October, the Ministry of Environment approved the new AIA, which would have practically allowed the Ilva to resume production.

The tension with the judiciary got further inflamed when the government issued the infamous “Rescuing Ilva” Decree, which was then converted into law 231/2012. Among other contentions raised by this act,[9] the content of the decree appeared to be openly against the seizure disposed by the Court. Its art. 1 provides that the plant could stay open and productive for 36 months, abiding to the prescriptions of the AIA, and in spite of the measures ordered by the courts. It thus circumvented the prohibition to use the installations, and assigned the management of the plant back to its owner. Albeit a seizure order does not hold the value of res judicata, the Decree Law possibly jeopardised legal certainty, which is of the upmost importance when criminal law measures are involved.[10] This led the Taranto Office of the Prosecutor, the GIP, and the Tribunale del Riesame to file a complaint to the Constitutional Court, which ruled on the matter in Opinion 85/2013. 


The Italian Constitutional Court and the Ilva case: Opinion 85/2013

The Constitutional Court was seized to rule on two separate issues: on one side, the Prosecutor alleged a conflict of attribution between State branches, on the other, the courts challenged the conformity of the Decree Law (and of the law which converted it) with the Italian Constitution. Though it declared inadmissible the Prosecutor’s claims, the Court did rule on constitutionality. The claims brought by the lower courts are complex and intertwined.[11] For sake of clarity, they can be summarized in two main questions: did the government strike a reasonable balance between the right to health and safe environment and the right to work? Moreover, did the government act within its constitutional powers or did it unduly interfere with the competence of the judiciary?[12]

In Opinion 85/2013, the Constitutional Court held that the Decree was in compliance with the Constitution, and that the balance it struck between different rights was not manifestly unreasonable. In particular, the Court stated that no right in the Constitution can automatically prevail on all others, and the same holds true for the right to a healthy environment (art. 32 Italian Constitution). The power to balance different rights is attributed to the legislative and administrative powers (§9). Thus, the AIA should be presumed reasonable,[13] since it adopts measures with regard to a specific situation, within the margin of discretion constitutionally given to the administrative power (§10.3). The Decree merely recalls the AIA and requires its compliance, even in situations already covered by on-going judicial proceedings. 

In practice, the consequences of this ruling by the Constitutional Court were twofold. The government has, since then, continuously issued decrees in order to tackle the Ilva problem; Ilva was able to remain open and to continue production.


The role of the Italian government after Opinion 85/2013

After the Constitutional Court ruling, the government both renewed the AIA several times, and issued another series of Decree Law, aimed at saving and rehabilitating the plant. Among others, two interventions are worth mentioning. First, Decree Law 1/2015, which placed Ilva in temporary receivership. Its art. 2(6) provided, inter alia, functional immunity from criminal proceedings of the receiver in charge, since his duty is to implement the BAT prescribed in the new AIA. Secondly, Decree Law 92/2015 followed a new seizure decree by the GIP issued in the aftermath of a fatal incident in the plant. Promptly, its art. 3 extended the authorization to continue production “even if seizure measures have been issued with regard to industrial accidents”, subject to the creation of a depollution  plan within 30 days. This norm applies also to on-going seizures and, hence, to Ilva.[14] Notwithstanding these efforts – and in spite of the 2015 reform of the penal code, instituting environmental crimes – there is extensive evidence that Ilva has not stopped polluting, and that the AIAs were not always respected.

All in all, the analysis shows the inability of the Italian State to significantly impact on the situation. First of all, the government was not capable of delivering long-standing solutions which would have allowed retaining employment in the area without putting the population at risk. Secondly, the conflict between judicial and legislative powers, which emerged with the issuing of precautionary measures, prevented them to jointly work toward the same goal. Thirdly, all this factors concurred in lengthening both the administrative and judicial proceedings, hindering the efforts for quick and effective results. As a result, no justice has been delivered, and Taranto remains deeply at risk. In addition to the employment challenges Ilva workers have to face, and the health threats affecting the population, the environmental damages caused by Ilva had extremely negative effects on other economic sectors, such as agriculture, fisheries and tourism.[15]  The second part of this post will turn to the (positive?) role of supranational actors in the Ilva case, assessing whether they could contribute to a solution out of reach for the Italian institutions. 


[1] The content was later codified in Directive 2008/1/EC of 15 January 2008, and it has now been included in Directive 2010/75/EU of 24 November 2010.

[2] The Decision implemented the Aarhus Protocol in EU law

[3] G. Caforio, L’Ilva Di Taranto Tra Interessi Industriali E Politiche Ambientali, Thesis, University of Perugia, 2012, 65

[4] It established a new depollution plan and coordinated several Government agencies for the appraisal of the epidemiological effects of the emissions.

[5] Namely, “Sold-off environment

[6] Cass. Pen., sez. 3, n. 38936/2005

[7] Cass. Sez. III, 27427 of 20 June 2013; Cass., sez. VI, 3635 of 21 January 2014

[8] A Decree law is an act issued by the Government, which has the same legal stand as a law approved by Parliament. Pursuant to art. 77 of the Italian Constitution, the Government exercises this power just in case of extreme need and urgency. The act needs to then be converted by the Parliament into an ordinary law. In spite of the requirements of extreme need and urgency, it is common practice of Governments to make use of Decree laws, some of which have been into force for decades.

[9] As its nature of “Specific legislative act”; see, among others, Italian Constitutional Court 143/1989, 346/1991, 492/1995, 267/2007, 241/2008 e 137/2009 and CJEU, Joined Cases C‑128/09 to C‑131/09, C‑134/09 and C‑135/09, Boxus et al., 18 October 2011

[10] G. Arcorzo, Note critiche sul “decreto legge ad Ilvam”, tra legislazione provvedimentale, riserva di funzione giurisdizionale e dovere di repressione e prevenzione dei reati, 20 December 2012; A. Sperti, Alcune riflessioni sui profili costituzionali del decreto Ilva, 17 December 2012

[11] The nature of the claims raised is extremely convoluted, as they range from the actual division of competence between different branches of Government to the nature of preventive precautionary measures. On this point see D. Pulitanò, Fra Giustizia Penale E Gestione Amministrativa: Riflessioni A Margine Del Caso Ilva, 22 February 2013

[12] A. Morelli, Il decreto Ilva: un drammatico bilanciamento tra principi costituzionali, 12 December 2012

[13]As recalled by the Court (§12.6) the problem of attribution of powers in the judgement at hand lies in the problematic aspect of preventive precautionary measures. When issuing a precautionary measure, the judge is called on providing a preventive balance to stop the effects of the crime to take place. However, the discretion of the legislative power to strike a new balance remains unchanged.  R. Bin, Giurisdizione o amministrazione, chi deve prevenire i reati ambientali? Nota alla sentenza "Ilva", 2013; V. Onida, Un Conflitto Fra Poteri Sotto La Veste Di Questione Di Costituzionalità: Amministrazione E Giurisdizione Per La Tutela Dell’ambiente. Nota A Corte Costituzionale, Sentenza N. 85 Del 2013, 2013

[14] It is controversial whether the arguments of Opinion 85/2013 would hold here, since accidents in the workplace are regulated by parliamentary laws, and not by administrative acts. Indeed a new complaint has been lodged to the Constitutional Court by the GIP. See S. Zirulia, In Vigore Un Nuovo Decreto 'Salva Ilva' (E Anche Fincantieri), 2015

[15] European Parliament, The Ilva Industrial Site in Taranto, Envi Committee, 7

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