5167 Pulp Mills Case
5167 Pulp Mills Case
5167 Pulp Mills Case
Alan Boyle1
1. Significance of case
1
Professor of Public International Law, University of Edinburgh and barrister, Essex Court
Chambers. AEB 2010
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reluctant to allow one treaty to serve as a jurisdictional basis for
litigation under other treaties. To that extent it rejects the idea of forum
shopping.
2. EIA
EIA probably the most significant issue dealt with by the court. Until
now, no international court has held unequivocally that EIA is obligatory
in cases of significant transboundary risk or considered what a
transboundary EIA requires.
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adverse impact. (para 205). This formulation and the finding on
alternative sites appears to leave open the possibility of reviewing the
adequacy of an EIA in appropriate cases, and it would not be
unreasonable to conclude that the Court did so here but found nothing
wrong with the EIA undertaken by Uruguay, apart from the failure to
make timely notification to Argentina as required by the Statute.
There is one human rights aspect to the case, although it was not
argued or decided in those terms public consultation. The Court
found that there had in fact been public consultation, but it nevertheless
went on to hold in categoric terms that no legal obligation to consult
the affected populations arises for the parties from the instruments
invoked by Argentina. (para 216). This goes beyond what Uruguay
had argued, and it seems right only if confined literally to the
instruments invoked by Argentina the Espoo Convention and the
UNEP Principles. Properly argued there should have been no difficulty
persuading the court of the general principle that public consultation is
a necessary element of the EIA process. For me this is the only
surprise in the entire judgment.
3. Prevention
The decision cites Corfu Channel and Nuclear Weapons and reaffirms
that A State is thus obliged to use all of the means at its disposal in
order to avoid activities which take place in its territory, or in any area
under its jurisdiction, causing significant damage to the environment of
another state (para 101). In this respect it again reflects the draft
articles of the ILC. This is not surprising: it fully accords with the
precedents and the leading textbook writers.
The court also confirms explicitly that the obligation is one of due
diligence: an obligation of conduct rather than one of result. It
specifically rejects Argentinas argument to the contrary. (para 187).
What does the exercise of due diligence entail?
- adoption of appropriate rules and measures (para 197)
- a certain level of vigilance in their enforcement
- the exercise of administrative control applicable to public and
private operators
- careful consideration of the technology to be used (para 223)
- EIA and notification
4. Procedure
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principle of prevention and obligation of due diligence. Violation of the
Statutes express provisions on notification. Several judges give
separate opinions in effect dissenting on this finding, which could have
gone either way.
Any other conclusion would allow one side to block all development
pending agreement or judicial resolution of the dispute. Could take
years. Pragmatic outcome.
The Court recognises that each party is entitled to make equitable and
reasonable use of the shared river for economic and commercial
activities in accordance with Articles 1 and 27 of the Statute. This is
fully in keeping with long accepted law on shared watercourses.
More importantly, the Court locates the right of equitable use within the
larger framework of sustainable development. It notes that Article 27
embodies [the] interconnectedness between equitable and reasonable
utilization of a shared resource and the balance between economic
development and environmental protection that is the essence of
sustainable development. (177). It stresses the obligation of each
party to protect the river environment and its flora and fauna, and to
take the necessary measures required by the treaty.
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dissent) or is court quite competent to decide on the adequacy of the
evidence. Both views tenable.
Problem here not the credibility of the parties experts as such. In fact
Argentinas did a good job on paper largely vindicating Uruguay. Real
problem for Argentina was proving its case not nearly strong enough,
and Uruguays was very strong. Tend to agree with Keith and
Greenwood that the decision was straightforward and unnecessary for
court to appoint experts. Seems unlikely that appointing experts would
have altered the outcome.
7. Conclusions