
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
The UK Supreme Court just ruled in favour of Zambian farmers, who argued their country’s courts are not up to the job of addressing an alleged environmental crime which was allegedly committed by the Zambian subsidiary of a UK company. This extraordinary ruling potentially paves the way for other plaintiffs to argue in a UK court that the US justice system is not up to the job of policing climate crimes.
Can UK fossil fuel companies now be held accountable for contributing to climate change overseas?
May 28, 2020 11.50pm AEST
Sam Varvastian
PhD researcher, Cardiff UniversityA ruling by the UK Supreme Court could have huge implications for British companies accused of environmental damage overseas. The April 2019 decision, in a case brought by a group of Zambian farmers against a London-based mining firm, establishes that UK parent companies can be held liable under UK law for the actions of their foreign subsidiaries. I analysed the implications of this case together with my colleague Felicity Kalunga, a PhD researcher at Cardiff University and a legal practitioner in Zambia, and our findings have just been published in Transnational Environmental Law.
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A catalyst for this could be the decision of the UK Supreme Court in the case mentioned above: Vedanta v. Lungowe. At first glance, the case has nothing to do with fossil fuels or climate change. The case was brought by a group of 1,826 Zambian farmers, including one Mr Lungowe, who claimed that a copper mine had been discharging toxic emissions into the local watercourses used for drinking and irrigation.
The mine was operated by a local subsidiary of Vedanta, a huge global mining company headquartered in the UK. And it was the parent company that the claimants sued, and the jurisdiction of the UK courts that they sought. The farmers were represented by a London law firm Leigh Day on a “no win, no fee” basis.
The claimants’ theory was that the UK company had control over the operations of its Zambian subsidiary, as proven by the materials published by the company itself. Pursuing litigation against the subsidiary in Zambia would be ineffective for various reasons, including the subsidiary’s uncertain financial position and the lack of lawyers there experienced in dealing with such a case.
After nearly four years of litigation, the UK Supreme Court confirmed: UK parent companies can be held liable in such cases and UK courts have jurisdiction to hear such claims. This allowed the farmers to proceed with their substantive claims heard in the UK.
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Read more: https://theconversation.com/can-uk-fossil-fuel-companies-now-be-held-accountable-for-contributing-to-climate-change-overseas-139007
The case which won the right of Zambian farmers to sue a UK firm for crimes allegedly committed in Zambia, without first obtaining an adverse judgement in a Zambian court, hinges on an EU law. From the press release provided by the UK Supreme Court:
… Article 4.1 of the Recast Brussels Regulation confers a right on any claimant (regardless of their domicile) to sue an English domiciled defendant in England irrespective of connecting factors to other jurisdictions [16]. Issue (1) presupposes that there is a real triable issue against Vedanta [17, 26]. Further, the judge’s finding that Vedanta was sued in England for the genuine purpose of obtaining damages, even though attracting English jurisdiction over KCM was a key contributing factor, is not open to challenge [27]. Any implied exception to the effect of article 4.1 must be construed narrowly [29-30]. The EU case law on abuse of law under article 8.1 (related defendants) is equally restrictive [31-34]. In that context, the test is whether the sole purpose of joining a defendant is to sue them other than in their Member State of domicile [35]. The EU case law also suggests that the abuse of law doctrine is limited to situations where EU law is invoked collusively to subvert other EU provisions [36]. In light of the decision in Owusu v Jackson (C-281/02) [2005] QB 801 (CJEU), arguments based on forum conveniens cannot justify derogating from the primary rule of jurisdiction in article 4.1 [36-40]. The concern about the wide effect of article 4.1 in this case is best addressed under the domestic law on the “necessary or proper party” gateway [40]. The claimants thus succeed on issue (1) [41].
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Even if the court concludes that a foreign jurisdiction is the apparently the proper place, the court may still permit service of English proceedings on the foreign defendant if cogent evidence shows that there is a real risk that substantial justice would not be obtainable in that foreign jurisdiction [88]. In this case, the judge identified “access to justice” issues in Zambia [89]. It is not in doubt that Zambia has independent judges, courts and civil procedure which would ensure a just trial of large environmental group claims like this one [89]. The issues are twofold. First, the practicable impossibility of funding such group claims where the claimants are all in extreme poverty, because they could not obtain legal aid and because conditional fee agreements (CFAs) are unlawful in Zambia [89-90]. Secondly, the absence within Zambia of sufficiently substantial and suitably experienced legal teams to enable effective litigation of this size and complexity, in particular against a well-resourced opponent like KCM [89]. The criticisms that the judge failed in his approach to the access to justice issue are not well-founded [92-98]. Overall, the defendants fail on issue (4), which means their success on issue (3) is academic [101-102].
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Read more: https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/uksc-2017-0185.html
If I have understood correctly, this assumption of transnational authority under EU rules (which during the transition period still apply in the UK) potentially opens the way for the UK and other European jurisdictions to sue US subsidiaries of UK companies for alleged climate crimes committed in the USA, without first obtaining an adverse judgement from a US court.
It might even make it possible for UK courts to sue UK based subsidiaries of US domiciled companies for alleged climate crimes committed in the USA, without first obtaining an adverse judgement from a US courts, providing climate activists with a means to hurt US businesses for activities conducted in the USA under US law.
All the plaintiff needs to do to persuade UK courts to attempt to assume authority in a foreign case is to convince the court that “substantial justice would not be obtainable in a foreign jurisdiction”. So if a plaintiff convinces a UK court that substantive climate justice would not be obtainable under US law, the UK court could potentially attempt to pass judgements over events which occurred in the USA under US jurisdiction, and attempt to collect damages from UK based companies connected to the US defendant.
Clearly it is up to governments outside the EU to consider potential abuses of this EU rule and the UK supreme court ruling, and place some limits on this arrogant assumption of transnational authority over business activities conducted in other countries, before the EU goes back to its old tricks of trying to dictate climate policy to the entire world.
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Michael in Dublin – that’s absolutely right – start with corruption, fraud, theft, mismanagement and incompetence – then watch the economy grow like a mushroom. It really would happen. Hard work, abundant resources and fine weather would be rewarded, instead of being thrown away. Then foreign investors in other sectors than mineral resources would start piling in. Africa has totally used up the ‘we were the victims of colonization’ excuse for impoverishment. The problems now start at home, in Africa. Africans can solve them, not foreign courts or foreign NGOs.
Maybe if we hadn’t just handed over cash in the first place, a lot of the corruption could have been avoided. What if all aid had been in terms of specific projects, like rural electrification, or railway construction, or even smaller, locally-focused projects?
I know zip about conditions all over Africa, but it doesn’t take a great statesman to know than handing over cash causes a world of corruption and graft.
Of course I mean, ‘start by removing…’
Could this be extended to cover the issues raised in a previous WUWT item? If so, this might kill renewables (as wooden stakes through its heart have so far failed).
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/05/31/destroying-the-environment-to-save-it/
Will Dominion and Virginia require that all these raw materials and wind, solar and battery components be responsibly sourced? Will it require independently verified certifications that none of them involve child labor, and all are produced in compliance with US and Virginia laws, regulations and ethical codes for workplace safety, fair wages, air and water pollution, wildlife preservation, cancer prevention and mined lands reclamation? Will they tally up all the fossil fuels consumed, and pollutants emitted, in the process?
Wouldn’t the plaintiff first have to demonstrate there had been “climate change” in the first place?
You know that climate activism has never been evidence based.
How the hell anyone can prove in a Court of Law, based on the rules of evidence, that something happened because of ‘climate change’ is a mystery.
Firstly, what is the meaning of climate change in a Court of law? Is it the common meaning laymen understand as a change in the climate over the years? Is it the IPCC meaning – catastrophic global warming caused by carbon dioxide emissions from human activities?
Secondly, how can anyone prove, beyond reasonable doubt, that something happened because of ‘climate change’?
Then there is the issue of catastrophic man-made global warming… when there is actually no discernible evidence of such a thing.
And if “the science” is dragged into Court, presumably the IPCC reports, skeptics can produce more studies to debunk the cherry picked science of the IPCC.
Then, of course, there is the question of how on earth can it be proven in a Court of Law, when scientists can’t do it, as to just how much the climate changes due to human activity carbon dioxide as opposed to natural climate variability?
Legal action involving climate change will always fail unless judges begin to administer ideology rather than the law as climate activist judges.
This bunch of judicial thugs got in the way of Brexit by dissing UK constitutional law now want to be the Judicial authority for the world.
Shut it down; Now
This old adage comes to mind: “Be careful what you wish for.”
The Zambian Copperbelt extends for 100’s of miles along the Congo Border and over it. My first job was as an exploration geologist for Anglo American extending their ore bodies around their existing mines. To find potential ore bodies we started with regional geochemical recconaisance which involved cutting numerous lines through the bush then doing traverses to take samples of the soil and observe the vegetation. The holy grail was to find a copper clearing and the blue copper flower in the middle of it – which gave an indication of high concentrations of copper in the soils – potentially from an underlying ore body. It is therefore not surprising that crops cannot survive in soils impacted by copper. The presence of copper and associated minerals (including cobalt) is a fact of Zambian soils and proving that any “polllution” is from the impact of mining would be extremely difficult. It is no surprise that Zambia has one of the highest incidences of lightning in the world. Think about it.
Is this really as surprising as it looks at first glance…
What appears to be the case is that the Zambian subsidiary of Vedanta was merely a “shelf company”. Real executive and operational control of that subsidiary lay in the hands of Vedanta London. That is what the evidence suggested.
The Zambian subsidiary attempted to argue Zambian claimants should come against them in Zambia, rather than suing Vedanta in England, where Vedanta is domiciled. They failed because it was established operational and management control lay in London.
The Law Lords were persuaded on the evidence that Vedanta UK was completely in control of the subsidiary.
There is no impediment to a foreign claimant pursuing a claim against a UK registered company in UK.
The only hurdle to jump was demonstrating the Zambian subsidiary was NOT the only defendant.
The is not much new here.