Vidyaranya
Chakravarthy Namballa, School of Law, University of Warwick
Abstract:
The purpose
of this article is to analyse the extent
of international rules that apply to multinational corporations (MNCs)
regarding their environmentally degrading activities and quality
control qua
environmental impact. The first part of the article describes the
ambiguous
legal status of MNCs and examines the rules that international
instruments and
host state agreements impose on the activities of MNCs. The second part
focuses
on jurisdiction and choice of law issues of cross-border litigation and
brings
out its major shortcoming. Finally, the conclusion comments on the
efficiency
of international law in imposing environmental liability on MNCs.
Keywords:
environmental
law; globalisation
Introduction
In
an attempt to cut costs, many multinational corporations (MNCs) export
their
polluting activities through subsidiaries established in less developed
countries. This exporting of pollutants is a crucial environmental issue[i].
Environmental pollution does not necessarily need to cross a
country’s borders
in the form of a substance, it can also pass the frontier through a
decision
taken in one state leading to environmental consequences in another
(Scovazzi,
1991: 395). To put it differently, environmental degradation resulting
from the
subsidiary’s activities can often be traced back to the
regulatory orders of
the parent company.
Importantly,
because MNCs are large contributors to the world’s economy
(Anderson, 2002: 400), they enjoy a significant
political power in the international arena. The paramount position of
these
corporate giants is not equally balanced against that of the victims
when
trying to make MNCs liable for environmental damage. More often than
not, the
cost of production is sought to be curbed by the introduction of
environmentally unfriendly manufacturing processes and consumables used
in
production, which slowly but systematically impacts the environment.
Accordingly,
the purpose of this article is to analyse the extent of international
rules
that apply to MNCs regarding their environmentally degrading activities
and
quality control qua environmental
impact. The first part of the article describes the ambiguous legal
status of
MNCs and examines the rules that international instruments and host
state
agreements impose on the activities of MNCs. The second part focuses on
jurisdiction and choice of law issues of cross-border litigation and
brings out
its major shortcoming. Finally, the conclusion comments on the
efficiency of
international law in imposing environmental liability on MNCs.
Regulations of MNCs under
International Law
Controversial
Status of MNCs
By
being non-state actors, MNCs are not directly bound by the obligations
set down
in multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) between states. Only
when
governments implement environmental rules on a local level may MNCs
come under
pressure to enforce them. However, multinational corporations often
operate in
third world countries, where the environment is not on the agenda of
first
priorities and judges are resistant in litigating against them. This
leads to
an alarmingly low quantity and quality of environmental standards that
developing countries impose on such corporations.
Shortages
in environmental regulation of MNCs are further intensified by the fact
that
the parent companies of the concerned MNC and its subsidiaries have
separate
legal personalities. In addition, the policy-making of the country of
origin of
the parent company may focus on bulk-production at low costs, as in the
case of
certain developing countries such as India, China, Bangladesh, Brazil,
which
eventually compromises the environment in one way or another.
Accordingly,
neither the ‘home’ state—where the parent company is
established—nor the ‘host’
country of the subsidiary’s location exercise complete control
over the
functioning of the whole entity of the MNC. As Anderson observes,
‘although decision-making within a MNC often
occurs within a vertically integrated command structure, that same
degree of
integration is not available to regulators’ (Anderson,
2002: 401). Since
multinational corporations conduct their business activities
simultaneously in
many countries, they emphasise their ‘ephemeral
and shifting legal nature’ and avoid governments’
scrutiny by ‘using their vague national identity
to
declare themselves free of the law of any country in which they operate’
(Macdonald et al, 2000). In other words, MNCs seem to function on the
territory
of no-man’s land because the host state cannot reach the
regulatory framework
of the parent company. For the home state, the subsidiary is located
too far
from its jurisdictional ambit to cause it to regulate.
Taking
into account the ambivalence in the status of multinational
corporations, it is
generally more beneficial for the victims to sue the parent company for
environmental damage than its subsidiary. Among the reasons for such
preference
are the limited assets of the subsidiary and less favourable local
liability
law compared to that of the country where the parent company is
incorporated
(ILA 2004 Report). Still, the legal alternative to establish liability
of the
parent company is everything but a walk in the park for the victims.
Notably,
MNCs avoid liability in transboundary environmental litigation by
relying on
their structural peculiarities and creating a corporate veil between
its parent
and subsidiary entity. Scovazzi argues that ‘although they may be very time-consuming, juridical
instruments to
pierce the veil and to redress its substantial unfairness are likely to
be
found in domestic legal systems’ (Scovazzi, 1991: 426).
Indeed, that
might be true, but as the lack of international regulation of MNCs puts
the
national laws of developing countries under elevated pressure, they
might not
always live up to their expected efficiency. That apart, it creates an
unfair
advantage in favour of these corporations when compared to domestic
companies
doing business in the territory; where the former is free from
trappings of
elaborate environment protection regulations, the latter finds itself
entwined
in elaborate regulatory mechanisms, which at times encumber business.
Interestingly,
U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and some of the
country’s major polluters have recently argued before the Supreme
Court of the
USA that the administration had erred in setting up a regulatory
framework
under the Clean Air Act for stationary sources of carbon dioxide, which
regulates emissions from major polluters, like power plants and
factories, but
not from tens
of millions of
small operations. They argued that these small operations ought to also
be
brought within the ambit of the new CO2-pollution
rules. From
this case, we can see the conflict of interest between the Chamber of
Commerce
as well as public interest litigation on environment.
Regulatory Framework of
Multinational
Corporations (MNCs)
MEAs and Soft Law
Initiatives
To
start with, MEAs are important in raising environmental standards
applicable to
MNCs, which are otherwise too dependent on national laws. True, the
rules
enshrined in MEAs do not bind multinational corporations under
international
law. However, as the failure to implement required laws on a local
level would
lead to state liability, governments have a strong stimulus to impose
the
regulations on polluters. Nevertheless, there seems to be strong
resistance by
states to establish environmental liability in MEAs. This ‘general lack of provision for international
environmental liability is reflected in the conspicuous failure to
include
provisions for such liability in most of the major multilateral
environmental
agreements between states’ (Ong, 2001: 697).
Indeed, apart from some sectorial liability instruments and soft law
initiatives, international law has remained relatively silent on the
crucial
issue of corporate environmental responsibility.
The
absence of a global environmental liability system is at least partly
remedied
with the existence of various civil liability regimes. Notably, the
international community has paid the most attention to environmental
damage
resulting from nuclear disasters such as Chernobyl and recently
Fukushima
(Friedman 2011), and oil slick accidents (Cherry 2011: 56). Taken into
consideration the immense risks that such hazardous activities bring
along, it
is not surprising that states have brought the operators of these
particular
industries under scrutiny.
Accordingly,
international liability framework for marine pollution was agreed upon
in two
core conventions: the first of which set down the liability for oil
pollution (Civil Liabilities Convention, 1970: 45) and the
second established a compensation fund (Fund Convention, 1971: 284).[ii]
The
International Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage
(Civil
Liabilities Convention) imposes strict but limited liability on the
ship owner.
It also covers damage to the environment ‘provided
compensation for impairment of the environment other than loss
of profit from such impairment shall be limited to costs of reasonable
measures
of reinstatement actually undertaken or to be undertaken’
(Civil
Liabilities convention, 1970: Article I(6)). Furthermore, nuclear
activities
have been regulated by numerous instruments,[iii]
which impose absolute limited liability on the operators of nuclear
power
stations. Similarly to the Civil Liabilities Convention, environmental
damage
falls within the scope of the Vienna Convention with only ‘the costs of measures of reinstatement of
impaired environment’ being recoverable (Article I (1)
(K)).
Where
oil tanker and nuclear plant pollution liability schemes have focused
only on
companies in a limited sector, the regional liability framework of the
Council
of Europe (Lugano Convention, 1993) and the
European Union, with the Environmental Liability Directive (2004/35/EC)
impose
liability on a wider sector of companies involved in environmentally
hazardous
activities. For instance, the Lugano Convention foresees strict
liability for
damage that results from activities harmful to the environment.
However, even
though the definition of the environment is very broad, the
compensation for
its impairment is yet again limited ‘to
the costs of measures of reinstatement actually undertaken or to be
undertaken’
(Lugano Convention Article 2(7)(C)). Unlike the harmonized civil
liability
regime of the Lugano Convention, the Environmental Liability Directive
excludes
traditional civil damage and creates an administrative liability system
whereby
public authorities must make sure that the polluters remedy damage to
the
environment. For that purpose, it sets down a two-tier scheme by
imposing
strict liability for listed hazardous activities and fault-based
liability for
all other activities causing damage to the EU protected biodiversity.
Certainly,
the discussed civil liability regimes are good tools in making the
polluter pay
as ‘externalisation of economic
risk is avoided not only on the state level, but … also on the
level of
branches and activities creating the risk’ (Doeker and
Gehring, 1990:
7). Nonetheless, the limited ambit of these schemes stresses their
inefficiency
in making multinational corporations comply with environmental laws
especially
because the principle of the “polluter must pay” is well
recognised under
almost all jurisdictions (Ong, 2001: 700).[iv]
It has also been recognized in all civilized jurisdictions that the
polluting
unit ought to be shifted out, if not altogether closed (MC
Mehta v Union of India
and MC Mehta v Kamal Nath & Ors).
Additionally, the principle of strict
liability holds that once
the
activity carried on is considered hazardous or inherently dangerous,
the person
carrying on such activity is liable to make good the loss caused to any
other
person by his activity irrespective of the whether he took reasonable
care whilst
carrying on his activity. The rule is premised upon the very nature of
the
activity undertaken (Indian Council for
Enviro- Legal Action v Union of India
J.T.). Therefore, in addition
to the various liability schemes, there have been a number of soft-law
initiatives in order to increase the environmental accountability of
these
corporations. A relevant example is the United Nations Global Compact,
which
encourages companies to follow ten general principles in their business
activities, including environmental standards (The Ten Principles).[v]
Another important model is the OECD Guidelines for Multinational
Enterprises in
which the governments address non-binding recommendations to MNCs
(OECD, 2000).
These soft-law instruments are definitely a welcome effort in reducing
corporate environmental damage but they, nonetheless, lack solid legal
force.
There is an emerging need to legislate in the said arena for MNCs akin
to the
introduction of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) under Company Law
in
developing nations.
Transnational Investment
Agreements
The
growth of international environmental law as a separate
area of public international law began in the 1970s with the Stockholm
Conference on the Environment in 1972. Where
international treaties,
agreements and resolutions created by
intergovernmental organisations,
as well as national laws and regulations, are being used to protect the
environment, the same does not yet completely fulfil the lacuna. Given
the limited scope of international liability schemes, it is up to local
governments
to bridge the gap in MNC regulatory framework. Transnational investment
agreements (TIAs) between multinationals and host states, despite being
international per se, provide an insight into how efficient the
developing
countries are in this role (see Ong, 2006).
With
the objective to receive profitable investments, third world countries
are
often willing not to enforce the environmental standards on
multinational corporations.
Ong remarks that ‘TIAs are currently
designed to operate within an artificially created and maintained legal
lacuna,
with the only exception being the laws and standards that the MNCs
themselves
are comfortable with and willing to accept’
(Ong, 2006:
205). For instance, the Baku-Tiblisi-Ceyhan (BTC) and
Chad-Cameroon
pipeline TIA projects emphasise the inadequate environmental
responsibility
imposed on multinational corporations (Ong, 2006: 189-205).[vi]
In that event, the environmental issues have been far from properly
addressed
and pollution is usually only recoverable when accompanied by damage to
human
health or property (Ong, 2006: 208).
The
host state’s autonomy to regulate foreign investment brings about
fear of
expropriation. Therefore, the renouncement from possible future legal
obligations is a precondition for multinationals to ensure a stable
investment
environment. However, these investment protection aims have gone too
far and ‘[a] t least in the environmental
field, the
“stabilization” clauses ostensibly introduced to protect
foreign investment now
actively seek to discourage the implementation of progressively
developing
international environmental principles within these host states’
(Ong,
2006: 206). Still, Verhoosel argues, that these are not the higher
standards
that multinationals are alarmed about, but rather ‘the
unexpected change towards a higher standard’ and if an
investor knows what the future will bring, ‘the
investment decision can already largely incorporate expected
environmental costs’ (Verhoosel, 1996: 13-14). In any
case, the
preventive approach does not find justification exclusively in the oil
and
nuclear industries but, taking into account the cost of ecological
accidents, it
is also economically wise elsewhere.
It
is important to note, however, that corporate environmental liability
is not always
a struggle of developing countries against MNCs, but often the two can
be found
on the same side of the battlefield. As host states can be closely
involved in
the activities of multinational corporations, they impose liability on
these
corporations with the same degree of reluctance, as they would accept
on
themselves. As a result, these multinationals enjoy an outstanding
discretion
under international law in picking and adopting the pertinent
environmental
norms. This lack of accountability is further aggravated when
considering the
difficulties the victims encounter in litigating against multinational
corporations.
Transboundary Environmental
Litigation
Against MNCs
Jurisdiction
At
the moment, there are no uniform jurisdiction rules for litigating
transboundary environmental torts. Thus, some international liability
conventions give the plaintiffs a choice of forum, whereas others
provide for a
single competent court. For example, the Lugano Convention sets down
the right
to sue ‘where damage
was suffered; where the dangerous activity was conducted; or where the
defendant has his habitual residence' (Article 19 (1)).
The Vienna Convention, on the other hand, says that the proper forum to
hear
the case is the court ‘within
whose territory the nuclear incident
occurred’ (Article XI (1)). At first sight, it
might seem that
this leaves the victim a choice but actually the subsequent more
specific rules
will determine the forum (Bernie and Boyle 2002: 278).
Outside
the limited scope of the international conventions discussed in the
previous
section, the victims are dependent on the rules of private
international law in
bringing a claim against MNCs. Significantly, there are great
differences in
the approach of civil and common law countries towards the conflict of
laws. In
addition, it is the clash between these two systems that convinced the
Hague
Conference on Private International Law to give up on the idea of
drafting a
global convention on jurisdiction of transbounday torts (ILA 2004
report: 2.1).
However,
in order for a Court to have jurisdiction to entertain a Petition, it
must
possess jurisdiction both in the domestic sense and under the Rules of
Private
International Law (Sirdar Gurdyal Singh v
The Rajah of Faridkote). Private
international law is not law governing relations between independent
states but
simply a branch of civil law of the state, evolved to do justice
between
litigating parties in respect of personal statutes involving a foreign
element.
Thus, the rules of private international law of each state must, by
their very
nature, differ, but by the comity of nations, certain rules are
recognised as
common to civilized jurisdiction, which makes it viable whilst choosing
the
forum to approach for redress.
The
EU, chosen here to represent the civil law countries, regulates
jurisdiction
matters with the 1968 Brussels Convention (Brussels 1 Regulation,
2001). First,
the general rule of Article 2 gives jurisdiction to the court of
defendant’s
domicile. Article 5 (3), however, establishes that in matters of tort,
the
defendant must be sued ‘in the courts
of the place where the harmful event occurred.’ The
European Court of
Justice has interpreted this to mean that ‘the
plaintiff has an option to commence proceedings either at the place
where damage occurred or the place of the event giving rise to it’
(Potassium
Mines). This ruling came to be in the light of the interpretation
warranted
to a dispute where
the place of the
happening of the incident, which may give rise to liability in tort,
delict or
quasi-delict (Faure 2013), and the place where that incident/ event results in damage are not the same. The
expression 'place where the harmful event occurred'—in Article 5
(3) of the
Convention of 27 September 1968 on jurisdiction and the enforcement of
Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters—was interpreted as
intending to cover
both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event
giving rise
to it. This resulted in the Plaintiff holding the option to sue in
either location. Accordingly,
the Dutch
plaintiffs in the Potassium Mines case could sue the tortfeasor
either
in the Netherlands, where the effects of damage were felt, or in
France, where
the harmful activities of the defendant company were located.
In
the majority of the common law systems, the victims can choose a forum
but
unlike in civil law countries, the courts can resort to the doctrine of
forum
non-conveniens (Anderson 2002:
412). This concept provides a right to decline jurisdiction if
the court
finds that there is an alternate better forum to hear the case. For
example,
the victims of the 1984 Bhopal gas accident attempted to sue
the
American parent company, which held majority equity shares in the
culpable
Indian chemical plant (Scovazzi 1991: 403-413). India had presented a
claim of ‘monolithic
multinational’ and argued that due to the difficulties
in finding
the answerable entity of the MNC, the victims should have the right to
sue in
the forum of the location of its central decision-making authority
(Scovazzi
1991: 407-408). The court of the United States of America, however,
declined
jurisdiction and pointed to the Indian court as being a more suitable
forum for
deciding the case. This proves how difficult it is for the foreign
victims to
sue the parent company of the country, where the doctrine of ‘forum
non-conveniens’ can easily be invoked in cases of
extraterritorial damage.
In
Spilada Maritime Corporation v Cansulex
Ltd. it is acknowledged that
the factors that the court is entitled to take into account in
considering
whether one forum is more appropriate are legion. The House of Lords
further
holds that the authorities do not— and perhaps, cannot—give
any clear guidance
as to how these factors are to be weighed in any particular case.
However, Lord
Goff of Chieveley, in his speech in Spilada
(supra.), clarifies that the question is not one of convenience, but of
the
suitability or appropriateness of the relevant jurisdiction, and
accordingly,
he expresses doubt as to whether the Latin tag forum
non-conveniens is apt to describe the principle involved.
Lord Goff cautions that it is most important not to allow the Latin tag
to
mislead one into thinking that the question at issue is one of mere
practical
convenience. Lord Goff cites, with approval, the statement that the
object
behind the words ‘forum non-conveniens’
is the forum, which is the more suitable for the ends of justice, and
is
preferable because pursuit of the litigation in that forum is more
likely to
secure the ends of justice.
Rationale Behind Choice of
Forum as Against Forum Shopping
As
seen in the recent cases and instances, the victims are usually granted
a
choice of forum in transboundary litigation. Birnie and Boyle, however,
are
critical about the forum-shopping possibility by saying that a company ‘will
never be able to predict with certainty where it may be sued or by what
laws it
will be judged. This is not an approach which benefits access to the
environmental justice’ (Birnie and Boyle: 279). True, but
in transboundary
environmental torts it is not always possible to predetermine a single
proper
forum. The right to choose a forum has, thus, an elevated importance in
cases
where the defendant is a MNC.
Clearly,
it is much easier for the victims to sue in the place where damage was
suffered, due to their familiarity with the laws of the country and the
smaller
costs of litigation. However, with the purpose of getting access to
assets and
ensuring the enforcement of judgments, the plaintiffs often prefer the
courts
of the parent company’s location. For example, in 1978, the oil
tanker Amoco
Cadiz sank in the waters of France, bringing about an ecological
disaster.
All the entities involved in the accident were the subsidiaries of an
MNC
incorporated in the US (Scovazzi 1991: 413-421). As France was party to
the Civil
Liabilities Convention channelling liability to the ship owner, the
victims
could have brought the claim in the French courts. However, they
decided to sue
the parent company instead, because the US was not party to the Civil
Liabilities Convention and had therefore no set the limit on liability
(Kiss
and Shelton, 2000: 230). Here the victims went forum shopping because
they had
less favourable conditions in the country where the damage occurred.
Therefore,
even when there is a possibility to bring a claim in a place where the
harm
occurred, the victims might still attempt to sue in a more profitable
foreign
forum. In addition, in this particular case, it was well justified
because the ‘forum
non-conveniens’ argument was not upheld and the corporate
veil of the MNC was
successfully broken.
Similarly,
it was definitely easier for the Indian court in the Bhopal case
to
assess damages and gather the multiple claims against the defendant.
Still, the
forum of the place where the harm was suffered could not serve the best
interests of the victims in this case. Not only would the US court have
done
them more justice regarding the available amount of damages but also
the
execution of the judgment would have been more likely in the home,
rather than
the host state of the MNC. Since the parent company hides itself behind
the
complicated corporate structure, it is often difficult to enforce the
judgment
against it, which emphasises the importance of the forum-shopping
opportunity
when litigating against MNCs. In the EU, for example, the victims have
a double
protection in addition to the right to make a complaint in a country
where
damage was felt, the recognition of the judgments in the host state is
also
guaranteed (Brussels Convention: Article 31).
Significantly,
sometimes the victims do not need to go forum shopping in the first
place if
the parent company is located in the same country where its subsidiary
caused
damage. The assets of an MNC and the execution of the judgment would
then be within
the reach of the victims. For instance, the 1999 Erika oil
spill
accident off the coast of France lead, inter alia, to a claim
against
the parent company, who’s subsidiary was involved as a charterer
in this major
ecological catastrophe. The issue of forum shopping did not arise,
however,
because the parent company, Total SA, was incorporated in the same
country,
where the victims suffered damage. Similarly to the Amoco Cadiz
accident
two decades earlier, France was bound by international maritime
conventions,
which excludes the liability of other tortfeasors apart from the ship
owner.
However,
in the beginning of 2008 the French Criminal Court gave out a judgment
whereby
it found the parent company, Total SA, liable for ‘causal
negligence’ in the
shipwreck. They
jointly sentenced
Italian ship-owners and managers, Giuseppe Savarese and Antonio
Pollara, the
oil group Total SA and the Italian maritime certification company RINA
to pay
€192m to the plaintiffs who were claiming nearly €1bn for
damages (Bouniot, 2008).
‘For
the
first time ever in the history of similar cases, the reality of
“environmental
damage” was acknowledged’ (Bouniot, 2008). This landmark
decision called into
question long-established precedential procedures and arrangements in
international maritime law to the benefit of environmentalists, in
contrast to
the pre-existing environment of tolerance to environmental degradation.
It
was further held, therein, that the
judgment debtors were guilty of
negligence
that had “a causal role” in the catastrophe and “as
such brought the disaster
about”. The magistrates did not pass sentence on the oil company
in its quality
of charterer for that status would have made it immune to sanctions
under
international maritime conventions but they circumvented the difficulty
by
holding it liable for the ship’s “vetting”. (Bouniot,
2008).
Lastly,
the said ruling also upheld the right and
locus of the authorities
in charge of natural areas and
environmental groups to sue for damages, not only for material and
moral prejudice,
direct or indirect, to collective interests that it is (their) mission
to
defend, but also for compensation for damage to the environment as
cited in supra.
Although
the corporate veil was pierced in both the Amoco Cadiz and Erika
cases, it is relevant to note that the decision of the US forum was a
result of
the non-applicability of the Civil Liabilities Convention, whereas the
French
court used its own creativity and public pressure to find liability of
the
parent company.
To
conclude, forum shopping is certainly necessary in transboundary
environmental
litigation for it cannot always be predicted whether it is the place
where the
harm was suffered or the location of dangerous activity that would
better serve
the interests of the victims. In other words, the suitability of the
forum for
hearing the case needs to be assessed on a case-by-case basis. For that
reason,
the approach of providing the victim with a choice of jurisdiction
seems to
justify itself. As Scovazzi rightly states that ‘[t]
he choice by the victim of the jurisdiction and the law most
suitable to deal with its claim for compensation balances the choice by
the
transnational corporation on the place most suitable to locate its
plant and
production’ (Scovazzi 1991: 427).
Submission to
Jurisdiction
It
is further settled by law that a person who voluntarily appears before
a
foreign Court is bound by the judgment of that Court. However, in British India Steam Navigation Co v
Shammughavilas Cashew Industries & Ors,
paragraph 21 cites, with approval, a passage from Cheshire and
North’s Private International Law (2008) on
submission to jurisdiction, to the effect that a defendant who appears
and
contests the case on its merits will be held to have submitted to the
jurisdiction unless the appearance is merely to raise a protest that
the court
does not have jurisdiction. In
this
case, the appellant was an English company registered in England
carrying on
business in England and it did not carry on any business in India. As
the
carrier under clause 3 of the bill of lading, only the appellant had an
option
either, to sue or be sued in England or in Cochin—a port of
destination—but the
shipper had no option to sue at Cochin. In its written statement, it
was
clearly stated that the appellant had appeared under protest and
without
prejudice to the contention regarding jurisdiction. It had also pressed
this
contention at the time of the argument, and, therefore, it could not be
said to
have submitted to the jurisdiction of Cochin court as it never made any
submission or raised any objection as to the fact of short landing.
Contracting
on the Choice of Forum
The
jurisdiction of the court may be decided upon
by the parties themselves on the basis of various connecting factors.
In
addition, the parties should be bound by the jurisdiction clause to
which they
have agreed, unless there are some strong reasons to the contrary.
Any
person may contract, either expressly or impliedly, to submit to the
jurisdiction of a court to which he would not otherwise be subject. The
right
of parties to agree to a forum of choice in which to resolve a
particular
dispute has been recognised (Modi
Entertainment Network v W.S.G.
Cricket Pte. Ltd). The parties in
such circumstances would be bound by the intention and agreement
expressed by
them in the private inter se contract
between them wherein they may either elect a forum of jurisdiction or
even
confer jurisdiction upon a neutral forum (Cheshire, North &
Fawcett:
Private International Law, Oxford University Press 2008).
Judgment in Rem
A
court of a foreign country has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem, which is capable of enforcement
or recognition in England or which
may be enforced in domestic
jurisdiction provided that the subject-matter of the action is
property—whether
movable or immovable within the foreign country.[vii]
However, jurisdiction in rem by a court
over res, i.e. outside the
jurisdiction, will not normally be exercised because
it will not be recognized by other courts except where the rules of
comity permit
the same (Rule of 40 of Dicey and Morris).
Applicable
Law
Applicable
Law under the settled principles of International Law
There
is no global harmonization of choice of law in transboundary
environmental
disputes but the ‘[r]ules of private international law normally
seek to apply
the law of the place where the wrong occurred’ (Anderson, 2002:
415). Hence,
unlike in forum issues, where at least some general principles apply,
the
applicable law matters depend completely on national rules (Boyle,
2005: 6). As
seen from the Amoco Cadiz case, even when victims have access
to
justice, it is not guaranteed that the law they wish will be applied.
Namely,
the court relied on the US law to establish the liability of the MNC
but used
the less generous French law to decide on the compensation of victims
(Scovazzi,
1991: 419). Thus, if the applicable law is not predetermined, one can
never
really predict the outcome of the case.
Notably,
principle 13 of the Rio Declaration invites states to ‘develop national law regarding liability and compensation for
pollution
victims and other the environmental damage … and to co-operate
“in a more
expeditious and determined manner” to develop international law
in this respect’
(Rio Declaration, 1992). However, until now, the harmonization of
national laws
in transboundary pollution litigation has been restricted mainly to the
areas
of oil and nuclear damage. The benefit of those international liability
conventions seems to be the fact that they determine the jurisdiction
and applicable
law issues beforehand. However, if the uniform law provides only for
small
compensation possibilities, victims are still forced to look for better
opportunities elsewhere. Notably, this was also the reason why the
French
plaintiffs in Amoco Cadiz sued in the US with the hope that
American law
would be applied.
Harmonization
of applicable law has been more ambitious on a European level. The
Council of
Europe’s Lugano Convention is not in force but it is,
nevertheless, an
important example of an advanced environmental liability regime. As it
is based
on the Brussels Convention, it leaves the victim a choice of
jurisdiction but
goes a step further and also provides for harmonization of choice of
law.
Consequently, it specifically determines when strict liability for
environmentally dangerous activities arises. If the Lugano Convention
would be
accepted by a large number of states, it would ‘create
a common regime of liability for environmental damage regardless
of where the action is brought. Thus, considerations of transboundary
justice
become ultimately inseparable from the substance of the law’
(Birnie and
Boyle: 279). In other words, there would not be a difference in which
European
court to bring the case because liability of the operator would be
determined
according to the same law. Still, it is highly unlikely that such a
complex
harmonisation convention would be supported on a global level if it has
not
even succeeded in finding regional support.
It
is not surprising that states oppose to extensively prescriptive
measures that
might interfere with their national civil liability systems. This
sensitivity
is well reflected in the EU attempt to harmonize rules on environmental
liability. These are the same reasons why the Lugano Convention has not
been
widely ratified, which stands behind the limitations of the
Environmental
Liability Directive. The Commission had originally proposed to provide
strict
liability both for traditional and environmental damage (Commission
White Paper
on Environmental Liability, 2000). However, the Member States rejected,
for
political reasons, the approximation of national systems on tort law
and only
administrative liability for environmental damage was agreed upon
(Winter et
al, 2008: 1-2).
As
a result, citizens cannot sue the polluting MNC directly but instead ‘[t] he public authorities act as trustee for
… natural resources and have the authority to file a claim
against the operator
who caused a significant damage to … natural resources’
(Brans, 2005:
96). Still, it is a comprehensive harmonization of choice of law and
has an
important impact on transboundary environmental litigation against
MNCs.
Besides, Article 15 (3) of the Environmental Liability Directive makes
clear
that even when the polluter of another state causes damage, the Member
State
has the right to recover remedial measures.
Even
though there is no harmonized system of acts of public authorities of
other
countries, ‘it would seem to follow
that such claims will have to be brought under a Member State’s
private law
regime, and, if they also constitute a civil and commercial matter,
will then
benefit from the regime of the Brussels I Regulation to obtain effect
throughout the EU’ (ILA 2004 Report: 2.2). In any event,
it is certainly
much more difficult for MNCs to avoid environmental responsibility in
EU
countries because the uniform application of the Environmental
Liability
Directive puts them under scrutiny by the member states where they
operate.
Nevertheless,
if the regulation of the activities of MNCs in all countries were
harmonized,
then it ‘would be accused of hindering
investment and infringing the sovereignty of host states’
(Anderson,
2002: 415). This is why, apart from a small number of transboundary
disputes,
the choice of law issues in cross-border environmental litigation have
been
left to be decided by national laws on a case-by-case basis.
Applicable
Law under contractual obligations
Where
the law chosen by two or more contracting parties, such as where the
law
applicable between them is English Law, the law having been chosen, the
proper
law will be the domestic law of England and the “Proper
Law” must be the law at
the time when the contract is made, throughout the life of the
contract, and
there cannot be a "floating" proper law.
Liability
for Damage to the Environment
To
begin with, civil liability is certainly an important tool for
providing
compensation for environmental damage. The most significant advantage
of civil
liability is the reliance on people’s initiative in suing MNCs.
This is
especially crucial in the developing countries, where the governments
often do
not want to regulate the activities of MNCs and, even less, to bring
them to
court.
A
delicate balance is to be achieved between international obligations
and
domestic enforcement thereof and while there may be multifarious legal
techniques that might address these issues, government policy may place
pressure on multinational corporations to comply with these accepted
norms.
Furthermore, it may also be worthwhile to persuade consumers to only
source
environmentally sustainable options and specifically reject all that is
environmentally unviable and erosive, as was done by consistent and
committed
campaigning by PETA against goods, which were tested upon animals.
Another avenue
may be for Courts of Law to prioritize and make time-bound suits
initiated for
common cause by community groups or Non-Governmental Organizations to
address
the dangers to the environment.
However,
harm to property or human health is usually a precondition for
addressing
environmental concerns under tort system. Hence, even though many
international
civil liability conventions have acknowledged damage to the
environment, they ‘generally limit recovery to the
costs of
reasonable measures of reinstatement and the costs of preventive
measures’
(Kiss and Shelton, 2000: 229). The difficulty lies, then, in who can
claim
damages for environmental degradation on unowned territory, such as the
global
commons. For example, in Amoco Cadiz, the court found it
unnecessary to
reach the issue of ecological harm because the ‘damage
was to res nullius and no one had standing to claim
compensation’ (Kiss and Shelton, 2000: 232). The judge was
only willing
to uphold the environmental claims that had a connection with civil
harm.
As
a result, civil liability might not necessarily be the best and only
solution
for dealing with the problem of corporate environmental pollution but
instead ‘a system that can draw on taxation,
regulation, and criminal sanctions, as well as civil liability’
is
needed (Anderson, 2002: 425). Further, Daniel opines that ‘[t] he failure to enter into force of many
liability regimes … point[s] to the
need
to be selective in choosing which environmental problems lend
themselves best
to a civil liability treaty’ (Daniel, 2003: 236). Indeed,
tort law
system on its own is too narrow in its scope to cover the broad range
of
environmental damage that MNCs can bring about.
Notably,
the EU administrative liability scheme focuses particularly on this
side of the
coin that tort law fails to deal with. Namely, the Environmental
Liability
Directive does not require property to have an owner in order for the
polluter
to become obliged to make up for damage to biodiversity. In addition,
the
measures that authorities can take are not limited to reinstatement. In
a
similar situation to Amoco Cadiz, the relevant officials would
have a
standing to bring a claim against the polluter and recover damages to
biodiversity as the guardians of these natural resources. The prospect
of such
an approach is illustrated by local Erika judgment, where the
French
court recognized the existence of ‘ecological prejudice’.
This acknowledgment
enables the authorities in charge of natural areas and environmental
groups ‘to sue for damages not only for material
and
moral prejudice, direct or indirect, to collective interests that it is
(their)
mission to defend but also for compensation for damage to the
environment’
(Bouniot 2008). Accordingly, not only could Birdlife recover costs
for cleaning
and caring for the birds but it also received monetary damages for the
cost of
replacement of each dead bird (Lepage 2012). Thus, the Erika judgment
is
a good case in point in showing what
really constitutes ecological damage, i.e. the infringement of the
environment
independently of any commercial considerations, which is not
necessarily
the type of liability that determines whether damage to the environment
can be
restored, but rather the recognition of the right of some entities to
request
it. The existence of such prerogative, however, is once again dependent
on each
specific legal system.
The decision
of Paris is one in the nature of a Correctional Court and has to
recognize this
head of damage and demonstrates the important role that the image of
each local
government plays within its economic, social and humanist ambit.
Conclusions
Due
to the transboundary structure and functioning of multinational
corporations,
they need to be subjected to higher laws than national norms and a more
stringent regulatory mechanism. Currently, international regulation of
environmental liability of MNCs does not provide a comprehensive
solution for
tackling corporate environmental damage and there is ample scope for
development in order to make multinationals more responsive to the
impact they
have in terms of environmental degradation.
First,
the activities of MNCs come within the ambit of global instruments only
in a
few limited sectors such as maritime and nuclear safety. As MEAs and
voluntary
guidelines lack the direct and far-reaching effect, MNCs are left under
the
regulatory autonomy of the states where they operate. Second,
jurisdiction and
choice of law matters in transboundary environmental litigation are not
subject
to international minimum standards and leave a vast scope to care for.
Thus,
the interpretation of forum shopping and applicable law provisions
depends on
national rules. The sharp differences in legal systems, however, make
litigation against MNCs highly unpredictable. Third, the international
focus on
civil liability regimes is insufficient to extend the liability of MNCs
to
cover ecological damage.
In
conclusion, international law clearly does not determine a holistic
liability
framework for Multinationals and in some areas of trans boundary
litigation;
the scarcity of rules would not even pose any problems where national
laws fill
the lacunae. However, the present excessive reliance on national laws
is likely
to underestimate the gravity of corporate environmental damage and the
need of
the hour is a rethink in the comprehensive policy-making at least
amongst
comity nations.
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[i]
The
term ‘Multinational Corporation’ is used in this paper to
refer to all
international enterprises, regardless their structure, which operates
in more
than one country at a time.
[ii]
As
the Civil Liabilities Convention and the Fund Convention have been
replaced by
two Protocols in 1992, this paper refers to the texts of the
Conventions as
superseded by these amendments.
[iii]
As
an elaborate discussion of all nuclear liability conventions of first
and
second generation is beyond the scope of this article, the further
references
will only be made to the global 1963 Vienna Convention on Civil
Liability for
Nuclear Damage (‘Vienna Convention’), Vienna, 21 May 1963,
in force 12 November
1977, 2 International Legal Materials (1963) 727, as amended
with
Protocol in 1997. All the comments, nevertheless, equally apply to the
regional
nuclear liability regime agreed under the auspices of OECD.
[iv]
Also see Vellore Citizens Welfare Forum v
Union of India & Ors.
[v]
Note that Principles 7-9 deal specifically with the environment. For a
detailed
discussion on the United Nations Global Compact see E. Morgera,
‘The UN and
Corporate Environmental Responsibility: Between International
Regulation and
Partnerships’, 15 RECIEL (2006), 98-101.
[vi]
See
Ong, 189-205 for a thorough analysis of BTC pipeline and Chad Cameroon
TIA
pipeline projects.
[vii]
In
Re
Spiliada Maritime Corporation, 1987 AC
460; Goods of Coode (1867)
16 LT 746; In Re Goods of Hannah Tucker (1864)
3 SW & Tr 585; and Evans v. Burrell (1859)
4 SW & Tr 185.