1. INTRODUCTION
In our previous editorial we commented on the tumultuous end of a decade and the environmental, social, and legal challenges that await.Footnote 1 During the first four months of 2020 a global pandemic caused by the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, which can lead to the potentially deadly ‘coronavirus disease 2019’ (COVID-19), stormed onto this already daunting list of challenges. The urgency and all-encompassing nature of the effects of the pandemic has led it to overtake and complicate most other challenges in unpredictable and unprecedented ways.
Soon after the presumed start of the pandemic in the Chinese province of Wuhan in December 2019, the Chinese government took quarantine measures that many considered draconian and possible only in a centrally controlled country such as China.Footnote 2 At the time of writing, April 2020, similar measures have been adopted and political decisions have been taken all over the world in ways that long seemed unimaginable in peacetime. At the moment, Europe – especially Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom (UK) – and the United States (US) seem to be at the centre of the pandemic. However, cases are increasingly reported in the Middle East, Africa, and India, raising profound concerns regarding the ability of developed and less developed healthcare systems to cope with the severe adverse health effects of the virus. Mortality rates, also in countries with well-equipped and well-funded public health systems, have been disconcertingly high and infection rates difficult to lower without very invasive measures.
The most common measures in place at the moment are various forms of ‘lockdown’, where freedom of movement is heavily curtailed, often allowing only those in ‘essential’ jobs – healthcare, some parts of the food industry, postal services – to work outside the home, and restricting other activities outside the home to sporadic exercise activities and essential activities such as shopping for groceries while maintaining physical distance from others. The estimated number of people currently under some form of lockdown is around 2.6 billion,Footnote 3 accounting for more than one third of the 7.58 billion world population. A large part of this number is made up by the population of India (1.3 billion people) who were placed under strict lockdown on 25 March 2020. This has caused widescale human suffering for many of the migrant workers within India who were forced to undertake dangerous, and illegal,Footnote 4 journeys on foot back to their villages, where they hoped to have a better chance of access to food and other essentials. Some countries, such as New Zealand and Australia, appear to have been able to ‘flatten the curve’ by taking strict measures at an early stage of detection,Footnote 5 while other countries, such as Sweden, have adopted much less restrictive measures, potentially allowing the disease to run its course. It is not yet clear which of these methods will be most successful in limiting the mortality of this disease in the long run.
Many of the profound economic and social impacts of the pandemic, and our attempts to limit its spread, have been immediate, with many economies coming to a virtual standstill overnight.Footnote 6 Unemployment has soared to record heights in the US and the price of crude oil has dropped below zero for the first time in history.Footnote 7 These effects are expected to be long-lasting and profound, with many industries doubting whether recovery is possible at all.Footnote 8 More systemic challenges, such as an economic depression, seem likely.Footnote 9 Worryingly, basic necessities – including food – may not be available to a large share of the world population in the near future without carefully planned, yet urgent, action.Footnote 10
Notwithstanding ongoing uncertainty regarding the scale and timeline of the current pandemic, the world that will emerge from this globally disruptive event inevitably will look different from the one we knew before. For some, this is a cause for optimism: perhaps the current social and economic turmoil can be a catalyst for a more equitable and sustainable society.Footnote 11 Others fear that during the period before a vaccine is found, existing inequalities will be increasingly exacerbated and life ‘as usual’ will continue, or resume, only for the lucky few.Footnote 12
For environmental scholars, particularly those with a deep interest in transnational environmental law, this ‘new normal’ poses many pressing questions. What will be the importance of our work given these changed conditions? What will change and which changes are relevant? The answers to these and many more questions depend on the short- and long-term impacts of the pandemic, our response to it and its aftermath, on the environment itself, and on the actors and legal frameworks that regulate our environment. Moreover, it is worth noting that the relationship between our natural and social environment has never been more important, nor subject to such intense scrutiny.
The outbreak of the pandemic has been linked to our treatment of nature and animals in important ways, raising questions of the sustainability of our current food system and treatment of animals.Footnote 13 The measures currently in place to fight the pandemic, while very costly in myriad ways, have led to a meaningful drop in pollution all over the world, allowing countries (temporarily) to achieve environmental goals that were thought overly ambitious in light of the economic compromises they required.Footnote 14 The heavy restrictions on travel and other activities may also trigger a shift in values,Footnote 15 making it easier to imagine an economy that incorporates more work from home and less professional travel. The unequal way in which the pandemic affects population groups, especially with regard to age and gender, may also lead to a shift in demographics with far-reaching consequences.Footnote 16 Finally, while there are positive environmental effects, it is unclear which of these will last: the need to maintain social distancing for a long period of time could also lead to an increase in car use and decrease in public transport use. Moreover, the vast amount of resources currently spent on combating this pandemic cannot be used for fighting other crises, such as climate change. At the European level, many legislative and policy plans under the European Union (EU) ‘Green Deal’ have already been reported to be delayed until 2021.Footnote 17
These pressing social issues will have a major impact on environmental scholarship. Moreover, the coronavirus crisis has profound direct effects on the academic community itself, including effects on our ability to engage in (certain types of) research,Footnote 18 the funding that will be available,Footnote 19 and the form that teaching will take in the future.Footnote 20 The many questions that emerge, and their answers, undoubtedly will be heavily debated in this journal and the academic community at large, fostering a discussion which we hope will continue to be diverse in terms of geography, gender, and stage of academic career.
The contributions to the current issue naturally predate the start of the pandemic. Nevertheless, many of the themes of these articles relate directly to some of the questions that we will face in the coming years. In the first two articles, Gor SamvelFootnote 21 and Iyan OfforFootnote 22 underline the importance of verifying scholarly assumptions on the effects of environmental law through empirical research. Contributions by Aleksandra Čavoški and Jaye Ellis highlight another interaction which has been central to environmental legal scholarship and practice, and will become even more so: the relationship between science and law – including the different processes and institutions involved in forging this relationship,Footnote 23 and the values which underpin it.Footnote 24 The final two articles in this volume address developments in environmental litigation, specifically climate change litigation. In both articles the role of private actors in climate litigation is highlighted: Samvel Varvastian and Felicity Kalunga consider the specific challenge of holding transnational corporate entities to account for environmental damage,Footnote 25 whereas Kim Bouwer's work uses metaphor in order to craft a critical perspective on the purported payoffs and limitations of large-scale private law climate litigation.Footnote 26 Combined, these thought-provoking pieces provide critical reflections on how we can future-proof both environmental law itself and the scholarship that studies it.
2. ‘A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE IS A DANGEROUS THING’: THE ROLE OF EMPIRICS IN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
Effective environmental law needs to be able to affect human behaviour. This is true for all areas of law but sometimes this is more challenging to achieve, and measure, in environmental law, as the impacts of human behaviour on the environment are often geographically or temporally distant, and the relationship between behaviour and impact can be highly complex.Footnote 27 Moreover, legal scholars are not always best placed to determine the effect of the law. If we infer the effect of law from the content of court rulings, we have a clear advantage, but if we look at alternative indicators, such as levels of pollution or changes in people's values and attitudes, other disciplines arguably are better equipped to collect and process the necessary information in a reliable way. Without the crucial feedback loops between the law and its real-life effects, we run the risk of basing our assumptions of ‘what works’ on untested theory, intuitions, and anecdote, thereby potentially reducing the effectiveness of environmental law and squandering precious opportunities for improvement. For example, insights from psychology indicate that many established climate communication strategies – emphasizing the high stakes of an issue like climate, linking climate stakes to people's personal interests, or cautioning people that they may actually hurt others through their behaviour – risk reducing people's willingness to confront the problem, because they feel they need cognitively and emotionally to minimize the (perceived) harm.Footnote 28 This would suggest that people's inaction can be a result of understanding the urgency of the situation rather than of ignorance, and that arguably our communication strategies should be changed accordingly.
The need for empirical research in environmental legal scholarship is profound and pressing in all areas of environmental law. Gor Samvel's empirical work on the effects of the Compliance Committee of the Aarhus Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-Making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention)Footnote 29 is an important contribution to identifying the elements that help in making environmental law effective. The work of the Aarhus Convention Compliance Committee has traditionally been characterized as non-judicial and non-binding, but its rulings are increasingly considered as binding, authoritative interpretations of the Convention.Footnote 30 The assumption tested in Samvel's piece is whether the binding effect of rulings, such as those made by the Compliance Committee, depends on their legal status and effect. For the Compliance Committee, the data shows that the substance of the rulings, rather than their binding effect, determines parties’ actions.Footnote 31 This underlines the importance of extra-legal factors in the decision making of states and, more pointedly, that judicialization may not be necessary in order to achieve compliance in transnational environmental law.
Iyan Offor provides empirical insights relating to a different area of environmental law, namely animal welfare and justice, in order to test assumptions regarding the impact of trade on animal welfare. Offor's empirical findings reveal that there are more questions than answers: currently available data about trade in animals does not include the information that would be needed to answer questions about animal welfare.Footnote 32 Offor identifies four main ways in which trade has an impact on animal welfare: firstly, through open markets that allow low-welfare imports, which in turn give rise to low animal-welfare havens and create a potential chilling effect or even a race to the bottom, as well as pressure on states to refrain from trade restrictions on the basis of animal welfare. Finally, the absence of labelling requirements allows this negative cycle to continue as a result of lack of consumer awareness.Footnote 33 Importantly, existing data fails to capture the true scope and scale of animal suffering caused by trade, as the developing field of global animal law is ‘disproportionately impacted upon’ by the normative underpinnings of trade law and policy.Footnote 34 This ‘bias’ is confirmed by the bias in the data. Indeed, Offor's search for quantitative data shows us that the very use of certain types of data can reflect an ideological position on the topic at hand (the relative weight of animal welfare and trade objectives).Footnote 35 This demonstrates that the presence or absence of data is not only important to explicate, confirm, or reassess relationships which we believe to exist, but also to highlight relationships of which we are not yet aware, or which remain unexplored. Such blindspots can inform legislative action as powerfully as full information on certain processes. The use of information, and the ability to access it, is also central to two other contributions to this volume, which discuss the relationships between law, science, and scientific information.
3. ‘KNOWLEDGE IS POWER’: SCIENCE IN LAW
The complexity of environmental processes poses significant challenges for environmental regulators, both in terms of ‘getting the law right’ and in terms of needing to allow for sufficient flexibility to enable law to respond to new scientific insights – two objectives which are difficult to achieve in isolation and fiendishly hard to accomplish in combination. Aleksandra Čavoški's contribution shows how the European Commission fosters the ‘co-production’ of science and law through institutional processes and instruments that facilitate discourses between scientists and lawyers.Footnote 36 Highlighting another important application for empirical research in environmental legal scholarship, Čavoški's article deploys newly collected data on the Commission's legislative process in order to show how scientific knowledge is integrated into EU law and policy.Footnote 37 She rightly observes that the role of science and scientific information in law is increasingly important and debated,Footnote 38 which only increases the need to understand these practices empirically. Moreover, by incorporating Jasanoff's theory of co-production in her analysis – which underscores the interdependence between science and law as social processes – Čavoški convincingly illustrates how the European Commission has acted as a conduit for co-production and thereby acts as a nexus between science and law in environmental policy.Footnote 39 Relating back to our earlier observations about the nature of the empirical information that environmental law needs and the role of legal scholars in obtaining this information, it is worth mentioning Čavoški's emphasis on the difference between the work of political scientists on the functioning of the European Commission on the one hand, and available, or desirable, legal empirical work on the other.Footnote 40 While legal scholars may lack certain methodological skills, their understanding of the legal process allows for insights that are typically lacking in the work of political scientists. This leads to different types of information collected and different insights gained.
Čavoški concludes by emphasizing the inherent value judgments involved in the incorporation and presentation of scientific information in policy and legislative processes.Footnote 41 The contribution by Jaye Ellis relates closely to this observation and the more general proposition that scientific knowledge is a prerequisite for making effective and ‘good’ environmental policy.Footnote 42 Specifically, Ellis’ thoughtful piece reflects on the critiques of the increasingly central role of data within sustainability governance through the use of goals and indicators, often as an alternative to law. By presenting a more nuanced view of the scientific process, and the scientists, behind increasingly popular calculative practices in environmental regulation, Ellis considers whether the critiques of reliance on indicators are well-founded, or instead are overly beholden to stereotypical representations of science and its processes.Footnote 43 Her conclusion is that goals and indicators can be potentially valuable ‘boundary objects’ which may help to create a shared understanding among different fields, including politics, law, economics, and science – and thereby facilitate communication and collaboration between people working on sustainability governance in these respective fields. However, much of this depends on the weight given to goals and indictors and their interpretation. When used as a means to replace normative dimensions of difficult sustainability problems with technical information, something important is lost in international environmental governance.Footnote 44
The common challenge identified by Čavoški and Ellis – how to use the wealth of scientific data currently available to us to create better law and policy – extends to the regulatory challenge posed by the coronavirus pandemic: never in history has there been a time in which we have learned more about a virus in such a short period of time, or have been better placed to rapidly construct a vaccine to fight it.Footnote 45 Nevertheless, the science and statistics of this pandemic alone are not sufficient to create ‘good’ law to fight it.Footnote 46 Already, legal scholars are questioning the legality and legitimacy of some of the security measures taken by governments in light of their privacy and freedom of movement impacts.Footnote 47 When the dust has settled, it is to be expected that many governments, and companies, will be scrutinized for the actions they are currently taking to combat the pandemic. The complex, interconnected global society in which these events are taking place, and the common good that a pandemic-free world represents, present important parallels between this future litigation and the environmental litigation of today.Footnote 48
4. VICTORY AND DEFEAT IN ENVIRONMENTAL LITIGATION
Environmental litigation speaks to the lawyerly imagination, particularly in the case of widespread and severe environmental damage which is difficult to litigate because of causation and standing hurdles.Footnote 49 The revolutionary judgment in the Dutch Urgenda case resulted in an order for the government to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 15 megatonnes in 2020,Footnote 50 which is being implemented through a policy package involving additional scale-back of coal-power stations, reduced cattle and pig herds, and increased subsidies to home owners.Footnote 51Urgenda has also led to a wealth of scholarly debate on the role of litigation in addressing environmental problems such as climate change.Footnote 52 In this ongoing debate the contributions by Kim Bouwer, and Samvel Varvastian and Felicity Kalunga, draw our attention to important developments, especially with regard to the role of private actors.
Private actors play a crucial role in transnational environmental law in the creation, shaping, and maintaining of rules.Footnote 53 Many private pathways have opened up alongside traditional governmental strategies for legislation and enforcement, exactly because established avenues tend to constrain private actor involvement.Footnote 54 Through a discussion of the UK Supreme Court case of Vedanta v. Lungowe, Samvel Varvastian and Felicity Kalunga show important progress in the availability of judicial opportunities for private actors to hold transnational corporations to account for their environmental behaviour.Footnote 55Vedanta v. Lungowe concerns a subsidiary of an English parent company which operates in Zambia and which has caused extensive environmental damage through copper mining.Footnote 56 The subsidiary as well as the English parent company were sued in the English courts by 1,862 Zambian citizens. The action was based on Zambian law and the common law of negligence, nuisance, and trespass.Footnote 57 Unsurprisingly, the companies challenged the jurisdiction of the English courts.Footnote 58 Much less expectedly, this claim was rejected, in large part on the basis that the claimants were unlikely to obtain substantial justice in Zambia.Footnote 59 The Court held that the English parent company owes a duty of care to foreign claimants affected by the operations of its foreign subsidiaries, which then gives rise to jurisdiction for the English courts.
Varvastian and Kalunga explore the possible impact of the court ruling, particularly on transnational corporate liability litigation and climate change litigation. As a procedural matter, Vedanta appears to confirm that a case could be brought successfully in the home state of the parent company if there are concerns regarding the financial ability of the subsidiary to cover resulting damages awards,Footnote 60 lack of expertise of the host state courts,Footnote 61 or concerns regarding effective enforcement of a judgment.Footnote 62 Assuming that these cases are admitted, there are specific reasons why the ruling in Vedanta (and similar cases) presents opportunities for transnational corporate liability and climate change litigation. With regard to the former, Varvastian and Kalunga highlight the ubiquity of multinational corporations in the legal landscape and the importance of being able to hold them to account. Here, Vedanta importantly confirms the presence of a duty of care of English parent companies.Footnote 63 Whether this may be enough to overcome other obstacles, particularly those that have developed through case law related to the US Alien Tort Statute,Footnote 64 is, however, doubtful.Footnote 65 In the area of climate change litigation there may be more cause for optimism. Allowing a case against the parent company in the home state for environmental harm caused by a subsidiary could make it easier to overcome the causal link problem that tends to affect climate change cases: the cumulative effect of the greenhouse gas emissions of both the parent and subsidiary companies is more likely to lead to a viable case than when looking at these emissions in isolation.Footnote 66
Their sobering conclusion is that the potentially positive effects of the case – including the possibility of bringing an action in the jurisdiction of the parent company – are promising but could ultimately be countered by distancing of the parent company and subsidiary in order to shield the former from liability.Footnote 67 In such a situation the reasons for allowing the case to proceed in the UK – namely, fear that substantial justice cannot be achieved in the foreign jurisdiction – would be replicated. Moreover, problems with the enforcement of these judgments in the foreign jurisdiction would continue.Footnote 68 Notwithstanding these ongoing challenges, it is important to note the signalling function of these cases and the claim to jurisdiction made by the English courts under these circumstances, and the rejection of the legal fiction of the corporate veil.
The ongoing aftermath of the Vedanta case also shows the complexity of identifying victories and losses in environmental litigation; while the jurisdictional question was decided in favour of the claimants, the disproportionate costs and duration of the proceedings – four years and 9,300 documents – as well as the likely seizure of the Zambian subsidiary's assets by the Zambian government,Footnote 69 may make this something of a Pyrrhic victory for the claimants. Bouwer's contribution also speaks to these questions of victory and defeat in environmental cases, and specifically the costs and benefits associated with large-scale private law climate litigation.Footnote 70
Kim Bouwer's argument is structured around the holy grail metaphor, through which she discusses the role that high-profile private law climate litigation cases can play in the development of climate litigation.Footnote 71 Specifically, she reflects on what the holy grail metaphor can tell us regarding the aims, impact and meaning of large private actions for damages within climate litigation,Footnote 72 in light of the fact that these cases are often considered the ‘holy grail’ of climate change litigation.Footnote 73 There are four main ways in which Bouwer believes the holy grail metaphor to have relevance for this area of private law. Firstly, the definition of victory and defeat is not always clear; secondly, the clarity of the quest (i.e., knowing what the holy grail is) is an essential precondition for a successful quest; thirdly, the quest necessarily entails an opportunity cost to the participants, regardless of potential success; and fourthly, the metaphor presents a possibility for reflection through narrative.Footnote 74
With regard to private law climate litigation Bouwer elegantly shows how, despite its holy grail status, it is not entirely clear how private law litigation would offer a ‘magic bullet’ solution to climate change.Footnote 75 However, by constructing this narrative through the most high-profile cases, including many ‘unsuccessful’ cases, a pattern of gradual learning emerges that helps those on the ‘quest’ to better define their holy grail. Within this narrative, the initial Urgenda judgment is referenced as an important first victory, despite being relatively conservative in its ambition and outcome, compared with earlier cases within the climate litigation tradition.Footnote 76 The fact that these earlier cases drew on the compensatory function of private law, and specifically compensation by the defendant rather than a public compensation scheme, would have imposed a level of responsibility on private actors that is absent from the Urgenda narrative.Footnote 77 Unlike Urgenda, however, these cases were ultimately unsuccessful, meaning that their potential game-changing role was left unfulfilled.Footnote 78 That said, a next generation of these cases is currently before the (predominantly US) courts, though here also success remains an aspiration.Footnote 79
This more nuanced view of victory and defeat is accompanied by a discussion of the complicated third-party effects that private law litigation can have.Footnote 80 There is a clear desire for litigation with regard to climate (in)action, which arguably relates to a moral need to hold private actors accountable for past and future damage. The difficulty of doing so through litigation stems from the challenge of incorporating societal considerations, costs and benefits into litigation between two parties in the context of one specific case. Bouwer concludes that these difficulties make it hard to say whether the net benefit of these cases is positive or negative,Footnote 81 underscoring the importance of the legal process in addition to legal outcomes. More generally, Bouwer's reflections aim to raise normative questions about the implications and meaning of these cases, which she believes are issues that occupy an important space within legal scholarship that empirical studies cannot and do not aim to fill.Footnote 82
5. CONCLUSION
The events over the first few months of 2020 have cast doubt on many perceived certainties related to societal relationships, professional and private life, and the shape of the future. The deadly pandemic responsible for these uncertainties has created widescale human suffering, with effects that will be felt for some time. The tireless work of medical professionals and other related professionals is central to mitigating the effects of this crisis. As environmental scholars, with various skills, our work can help in contributing to new visions of the future with changing behaviour and changing impacts on nature. As transnational scholars, our work can be a reminder of the need to continue to collaborate, even at times where borders are closing and global supply chains are strained. Throughout our (scholarly) community the first response has been primarily one of support, hope, and resilience – bringing out the best in people at the worst of times. A good starting point for new visions for the future.