Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH RIGHTS BODY OPENS NY HEARINGS IN PROBE OF OIL FIRMS

- —THOMSONREU­TERS FOUNDATION

NEW YORK— A Philippine human rights commission opened hearings in New York on Thursday into whether oil companies violate human rights by causing climate change, hoping to attract the attention of world leaders meeting at the United Nations.

Survivors of a 2013 typhoon have asked the commission to assess the responsibi­lity of oil companies for man-made global warming, which is linked to extreme weather events, such as storms and hurricanes.

Thursday’s hearings, the first time the sessions were held abroad, opened on the sidelines of the annual UN General Assembly of world leaders.

“It’s symbolic,” Roberto Eugenio Cadiz, chair of the independen­t commission, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. The commission is mandated by Filipino law to probe rights abuses.

The complaint, brought by survivors of Supertypho­on “Yolanda” (internatio­nal name: Haiyan), which killed thousands of people in 2013, and by more than a dozen organizati­ons, such as environmen­talists Greenpeace Southeast Asia, names 47 fossil-fuel companies.

The companies include giants Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Chevron Corp., Total and BP PLC, none of which returned requests for comments.

Invitation declined

None of the 47 fuel companies accepted invitation­s to partake in the process, said Cadiz, though some challenged the body’s jurisdicti­on over the matter.

The hearings were held in an austere business conference room, with an empty seat earmarked for the absent oil company representa­tives.

On Thursday, Cadiz questioned Brenda Ekwurzel, lead author of a study published in the academic journal Climate Change, that measured the contributi­ons of greenhouse gas emissions to global warming by industrial­ized and developing nations.

Katharina Rall, a researcher for watchdog Human Rights Watch, said the commission’s findings expected next year would heavily influence future cases filed against oil companies over their role in climate change.

“(It) could have great significan­ce for millions of people around the world,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Recent years have seen a growing stream of civil lawsuits worldwide charging oil companies with contributi­ng to climate change that is damaging infrastruc­ture and coastal communitie­s.

In the United States, about 20 climate lawsuits are filed each year, while elsewhere three dozen have been filed in the past 15 years, according to the British-based Business and Human Rights Centre.

Cadiz said he hoped the findings contribute to establishi­ng an internatio­nal treaty on respect for human rights by businesses in relation to climate change.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines