Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2009
“We are fiddling, while Rome burns.”
INTRODUCTION
Although its value as precedent, paradigm, or standard-setter continues to be disputed, the Trail Smelter arbitration plays an important place in our contemporary search for adequate instruments and forms of international environmental regulation. Already the various contexts in which reference is made to Trail Smelter communicate its multifaceted messages. Through the eyes of today, the Trail Smelter arbitration might seem outdated or skewed, in particular its disputed construction of Canada's responsibility for the transboundary harm that was brought about by a private enterprise. And yet, whereas Trail Smelter stands apart from the later development of international law and the doctrine of state responsibility, it continues to engage our imagination. Trail Smelter continues to resurface as a starting point for thinking about adequate ways to resolve border crossing environmental conflicts, but also other forms of transboundary harm. It does so, precisely, by inspiring ongoing inquiries into the right balance between State- versus Market-based strategies of environmental regulation, and by prompting many of the pertinent questions raised by deterritorialized corporate activities, highly diversified regulatory structures, and the limited enforcement competences of traditional political agencies.
In this light, Trail Smelter must be read as inviting the following questions: Who bears responsibility for extraterritorial harm caused by transboundary pollution? Should state responsibility for privately induced transboundary harm replace or accompany private responsibility? Does either concept of responsibility respond to the particularly complex challenge posed by a proliferation of decreasingly well-defined environmental harms, dangers, and risks?
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