Skip to content or view screen version

4 Essential Ways To Save The Earth : Part 4

Keith Farnish | 23.06.2006 23:29 | Ecology

Many human and civil rights activists see the law as a key part of the tools of an oppressive state. This was particularly prevalent in the 1960s and 1970s in Europe and the USA, and is still the case in many parts of the world. At best it may be seen as a two-edged sword with, on the one hand Official Secrets laws protecting the state, and on the other Data Protection laws protecting the individual, for instance. But in the right hands and in the right circumstances the law can be used to amazing effect, and not just in the ways you might expect.

Aside from the obvious, and often extremely weak, way in which existing laws on environmental pollution are enforced by authorities I see three main ways in which an environmental group or a determined activist can use the law to really make a positive impact on the natural environment:

1) Exposure

2) Coercion

3) Political action

It is easy for environmentalists considering using the law to get bogged down in the nitty-gritty of legislation, case law, the relative merits of criminal, public and civil law, and the web of national and international rights that may or may not be relevant. But it doesn’t have to be as onerous as all that. I believe that the most simple methods are often the best, essentially because they are easier to carry out effectively by many people.

Exposure can be extremely simple, and it can have extraordinary power.

Think of a large multinational company, with a bad reputation for damaging the environment; in fact, take your pick - ExxonMobil, Coca-Cola, Dow Chemicals, Monsanto ... The one thing, apart from their reputation, that all of these companies have in common is that their activities have been exposed – made public – by the efforts of numerous concerned people and organisations. But what has this got to do with the law?

Imagine that all of these companies had their headquarters in North Korea. Do you think that their activates would be so widely exposed to the public and their reputations so tarnished? I very much doubt it. Laws exist in these countries that allow such exposure to take place.

So let’s consider a mythical company called BigCorp, based in the USA. They have been a staple in the oil and chemical industry for many years, are popular with their shareholders and seen as a good employer to thousands of people. They operate in 30 different countries and have a number of subsidiaries - BigCorp UK, BigCorp France and BigCorp India – which operate at arm’s length from the parent company. Unknown to the general public, they have been lobbying the US Government to ensure that climate change never reaches the top of the government agenda; the Government has been responsive and has done its best to ensure the public don’t worry about climate change – they just keep buying the oil, and BigCorp’s profits keep increasing.

In the UK a conscientious employee in the IT department sees a blocked e-mail coming to the CEO of BigCorp from the UK organisation the Confederation of Big Business. It was blocked because it contained a very large attachment. The subject line of the e-mail is “Re: Government climate policy. Lobbying successful.”. The employee is worried enough by this to invoke the company Whistleblowing Policy, and also speaks confidentially to a friend who works for a local newspaper.

At the same time a French environmental organisation, concerned about BigCorp France’s lack of investment in anything but oil starts up a subvertising web site called BigCorpSucks.com. There is no intention of making money from the venture, the site simply copies the company’s own web site but includes facts and figures about global warming, along with links to other environmental organisations.

In India, a local environmental activist, concerned that an oil refinery is about to be built on an area of wetland by BigCorp India, invokes the Freedom Of Information Act to find out how planning permission was granted. After a delay of 4 months a redacted letter between BigCorp Inc. and the local state government is sent out, which shows clearly that BigCorp had threatened to pull out of India had the refinery not been granted planning permission.

Frustrated by the lack of internal action, the UK employee asks her friend to publish an article citing an anonymous source, which suggests that the UK Government has caved in to a lobbying exercise by the CBB on behalf of BigCorp. A fan of BigCorpSucks.com in the USA does a search on Google News and comes up with a local UK online newspaper article about BigCorp’s suspected lobbying activities. He is interested enough to invoke the USA Freedom Of Information Act to find out whether any Senators have interests in BigCorp. It turns out that there are three Senators who have sat on the board of BigCorp Inc.

The Indian activist gets to the last item in his FOI request and finds a redacted letter from one of the American “BigCorp” Senators sent to the Head of Planning for the Indian state being put under pressure. It contains misinformation about the usefulness of wind power and how India needs to accept the continued growth of fossil fuels.

The American and Indian activists go public. In the USA the Washington Post publishes an article about the oil interests of American Senators, using their contacts to expose a web of BigCorp misinformation. In India, the activist decides to contact the BBC World Service web site, who publish an article including the two redacted letters.

Two months later, BigCorp admit that climate change is partly caused by humans and that they are about to commence the largest renewable energy investment in living memory.

This may be fiction, but all of the activities carried out by our heroes were entirely legal in their countries.

But what if companies do not take any action and try to ride out the storm or, say a Government agency decides to carry out some activity that is potentially damaging to the environment? Sometimes exposure cannot work by itself, and more direct legal action is required. There are many ways in which we can attempt to use existing laws as a form of coercion (e.g. fines, cease and desist orders, refusal of permission etc.), but unfortunately they are so weakly enforced in most cases that we have to be more creative.

One method that has been used effectively is judicial review.

Judicial review can be used in many countries as a means of challenging government decisions that adversely affect the environment. Providing the objector has sufficient “standing” (organisations are more effective than individuals in such cases) then a judicial review could be granted on the grounds of illegality, irrationality or impropriety. This has been used jointly by Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth in the UK to challenge the opening of a nuclear reactor on Sellafield, Cumbria, and more recently by Friends of the Earth in challenging the dropping of a critical environmental policy by the UK Government.

In both cases the reviews had mixed results, but whether the judicial review is successful or not, the decision being questioned will have been subject to far greater exposure than may have been possible using other methods. This is not just restricted to direct public authority actions; it can be used wherever a public body has been lobbied to favour a commercial activity which impacts the environment, and the exposure for the company if they have unfairly used lobbying (or worse) could be devastating in the public eye.

A second form of coercion is the ability to potentially sue a company or even a government for lack of environmental control. This type of action has been very successful with regards to harm caused by personal injury, the abuse of workers’ rights and gross neglect of the environment causing damage to health; so is there any reason why this could not extended to general environmental damage against a company or even an entire country?

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is widely recognised as the core of basic human rights laws worldwide. The legal framework for this, the International Covenant On Civil And Political Rights contains the statement “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence”, which could be interpreted as “no one can have their home taken away from them due to sea level rise, hurricane, sandstorm, landslide or other environmental event caused by the inaction of a nation in reducing their greenhouse gas emissions”.

If, as seems increasingly likely, catastrophic environmental events are linked directly to greenhouse gas emissions, then we could be seeing a whole new area of environmental litigation, based on fundamental human rights.

This leads on to the final way in which the law can be used, and it goes right to the core of our right to call ourselves a civilised race.

There are nations that suppress individuals’ fundamental human rights. This is clear, but the extent to which human rights and thus the ability to raise environmental awareness are suppressed in some countries still leaves me speechless; you only have to look at the regimes of North Korea, Burma, Sudan, China and Zimbabwe to imagine how desperate, and brave, environmental and human rights campaigners have to be to try to make a difference.

The clear way to resolve this is through political action; through lobbying your government, working with organisations such as Amnesty International or, as in the recent case of Google in China, using a combination of exposure and political pressure to ensure multinational companies do not succumb to the oppressive regimes of such countries.

I am fortunate to live in a country where I can write the things that I do, post them on the Internet and not have the fear of someone coming into my home and taking me away for what I have written. If another person or organisation does not have the right to make a difference then those people that do have rights have a moral duty to lobby on their behalf. We should all have the right to be able to use the law to protect our planet.

Keith Farnish
- Homepage: http://www.theearthblog.org

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

World Repair: 12-Step Program

25.06.2006 05:29

Great Article.

I thought you might be interested in the following:

World Repair

Jordan Thornton & James Jaeger

1) CREATE A SEPARATION OF BUSINESS AND STATE - Let the businessmen run business, within the laws and public decency, subject to public controls, and harsh penalties. A conflict of interest is not something to be ignored.

The state should also not be sanctioning certain BIG business to the exclusion of medium and smaller businesses. A perfect example are the Federal Reserve Banks, which are government-sanctioned, quasi-private banking cartels acting against the public interest on at least seven counts.

2) REINSTATE CORPORATE CHARTERS - Make them earn the right to coexist with us. These laws were removed by corrupt politicians. If no penalty is harsh enough for them to behave, then put their right to exist on the line.

Insist that corporate charters better define the purpose of the corporation so as to minimize conflicts of interest and place more emphasis on "making good products" rather than just "making money."

3) REFORM CAMPAIGN FINANCES - Every politician jokes/talks about doing this. We must ensure that it does get done. Make campaigns adhere to a FINITE amount of tax-supported money, equal to all candidates. No private "donations". After all, politics is not about money ... right?

If people or entities want to give (excessive) sums to political parties, at least set up a BLIND POOL that they can contribute to. Altruistic donations should be unconditional. Isn't THAT the idea of true "giving"?

4) REFORM POLITICIANS' PAY - "Rich" does not mean "intelligent". Make pay reflective of performance, like any other job -- or actually connect politician's pay to their performance statistics. In any case, they should not be so disconnected from "real life" that they are completely mystified by it or are rewarded when they make anti-social blunders.

5) TAKE MONEY OUT OF THE LOBBY - Bribery is illegal, and it should be the same within the political arena. "Rich" also does not mean "important", regardless of what the architects of our system would have you believe.

When such bribery is extreme, we get actions like the government giving the broadcast spectrum to certain television interests/networks and in return these television interests/networks support the election and agenda of the bribing politicians. After all, the highest line-item in a politician's campaign budget is prime-time network broadcasting.

6) OPEN "TOWN HALL" CENTERS - A place for your elected officials to meet with the People before making decisions "on their behalf". These structures exist in all communities. They are schools, churches, and they stand empty a good portion of the week. Let's put them to better use.

And when politicians aren't meeting people in person, why can't they be posting and emailing real people on the Internet and in the Newsgroups? Let's see some shirts rolled up and actual WRITTEN DEBATE happening -- not ivory tower thinking and authoritarian speeches/books/TV talk-shows all the time. Words are cheap -- especially words floating through the air. Lastly, the voting booth should be open on the weekend, so as to maximize the time a voting option is exposed to the public. And what about instant registration. Certainly this is a possibility in an electronic age.

7) REDUCE DEFENSE SPENDING - We've been sold a line, by the same people who profit from this spending. If you'd stop making enemies, and attempt peace, demilitarization would be possible. Hold the people and banks that finance wars and the creation of military hardware accountable. Why should anyone, or any entity, get to hide behind the scenes and profit while young men and women are giving their lives?

8) TAKE AWAY GOVERNMENT'S BLANK CHECK - Put Government spending under public jurisdiction, the People, part of the budgetary process. Don't just hand them the keys and walk away. That's stupid.

As part of taking away the blank check, the Federal Reserve System needs to be brought back under Constitutional Law. (See THE CREATURE FROM JEKYL ISLAND by G. Edward Griffin at  http://www.realityzone.com/creature.html.) Right now it is a private institution profiting off the system and providing the government, in essence, an infinite amount of fiat money. In the last analysis, the act of lending money for war or conflict should be outlawed by the United Nations, starting with the US. If the UN/US truly wants to promote world peace, then let them vote to outlaw the lending of money by all banks to all governments, so that conflict is not so "convenient" and profitable. War should be a cash-n-carry affair -- as the Framers of the US Constitution envisioned.  http://grid.let.rug.nl/~usa/D/1776-1800/constitution/const.htm

Unless citizens are willing directly ante-up with the tax money to fight a particular war, the activity is not all that important. When banks lend money to a government for war, yet withhold such loans to other governments, hasn't the power to determine the outcome of conflicts been transferred from the CITIZENS to the BANKS?

9) GET OFF OIL - Most of the conflicts in the world are over this naturally-occurring sludge, including the ones in question. Alternatives exist, but are suppressed, because the people in power are also intimately connected to the oil industry, and under the control of its lobby. Oil creates the conditions which produce terrorism. The earth is beginning to reject us, because of the unchecked environmental destruction caused by oil. This is a threat to our security.

At the current rate of power consumption/demand, the world's population must focus its attention on generating energy from PLASMA FUSION as no other alternative energy source (with the exception of ZERO POINT ENERGY) will suffice. The burning of fossil fuels is causing a greenhouse effect and MUST cease immediately. If this gets much more serious, none of the other events on this list will matter.

10) MEDIA REFORM IS VITAL - Before any of the above can be tackled, media needs to be reformed, because the same forces controlling the above, also control the media.

Read a book called, IT'S THE MEDIA STUPID a book report at  http://www.mecfilms.com/universe/articles/stupid.htm and see the Film Industry Reform Movement at  http://www.homevideo.net/FIRM

11) ENCOURAGE EXPLORATION - In the same spirit colonists explored and settled the "New World" which later hosted the United States and gave fuller bloom to the principles of liberty and democracy, we need to explore and colonize the Solar System, starting with Mars, so that the human race is not doomed to the fate of stagnation on but one celestial body in an infinite universe. Read, CASE FOR MARS by Robert Zubrin available at  http://www.marssociety.org.

12) SECURE THE WORLD FROM EXTINCTION-LEVEL CATASTROPHE - The very real threat of being impacted by a meteor (as evidenced yesterday with the discovery of 2002 T-Whatever), or long-period comet, MUST be addressed because if this one event happens, none of the other events on this list will matter in the slightest. Some night look at the Moon and realize that for every impact crater you see there, the Earth has already experienced about 2 to 3 times as many (due to its larger mass). If the comet that hit Jupiter had impacted with Earth, you, and every person you know, would be dead right now. There is evidence that the number of comets and/or asteroids that will be hitting the Earth may be increasing because of the Solar System's 18-million year bob in its path around the galactic nucleus. There are an estimated 2,500 earth-crossing asteroids. We have only located about 250 of them. One could hit us tomorrow.

The Earth has had several close calls in just the past 10 years -- one of them just last month. Did the mainstream media inform you of this as well as it should have, if at all? Out of the 17% that goes to national defense, veterans and foreign affairs, at least 5% must immediately be re-allocated to locating and handling extinction-level Earth-crossing asteroids and long-period comets. Spending money on frivolous foreign conflicts will not save humanity from a lethal and indifferent Universe.

Jordan Thornton
mail e-mail: pilgrim112@hotmail.com
- Homepage: http://www.whatreallyhappened.com


Response to Jordan

26.06.2006 12:11

Thanks for the nice comment Jordan. The 12 point plan seems to be more of a general way to "put things right" based at least partly on the view that small government is good. That would be the case if we could trust business to be good instead, but at the moment we are in the bizarre position where we can't really trust anyone except ourselves and a few NGOs.

I know that WRH has anthropomorphic climate change denial as part of its editorial policy, so I have some difficulty accepting something which may emanate (in part?) from this source as I am a complete convert to the "it's our fault and our job to put things right" view. The meteorite / comet might be our just desserts; the most terrible but the most divine form of intervention.

Keith

Keith Farnish
- Homepage: http://www.theearthblog.org


Thanks

26.06.2006 20:20

"That would be the case if we could trust business to be good instead, but at the moment we are in the bizarre position where we can't really trust anyone except ourselves and a few NGOs."

I fully understand this. This is a plan we've given to some parties in Canada and the Us who are gaining momentum. We see it as a way to impose rules upon the rulers.

"I know that WRH has anthropomorphic climate change denial as part of its editorial policy, so I have some difficulty accepting something which may emanate"

Actually, I or Mr. Jaeger have no affiliation with the site, and I understand what you're saying. I just like to give people the link because it's a great resource for stories of interest on a number of different topics, culled mainly from the mainstream media around the world.

"I am a complete convert to the "it's our fault and our job to put things right" view."

That's great. I hold a similar view.

"The meteorite / comet might be our just desserts; the most terrible but the most divine form of intervention. "

Ha Ha! That's great. Nobody's ever commented on it like that before.

All the best.

Jordan