On Tuesday, October 6th, Filip Gregor, Head of our Responsible Companies section spoke at the conference on ‘Global Supply Chains - Global Responsibility: Human Rights and Decent Work in Global Supply Chains’ organised by the German Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs on the occasion of the German EU Council presidency.
Addressing the question of ensuring effective EU action on human rights, Mr Gregor stressed the importance of proper enforcement and corporate liability, pointing to the significance of establishing a due diligence framework in EU legislation that ensures judicial remedy for victims as well as responsiveness of companies in line with their capacities. You can read below his full speech:
Esteemed Ministers, dear organisers,
Thank you for the invitation. Out of respect to the ambitions of the conference, allow me to skip the formalities and go straight to the content.
I would like to answer the question ‘ What should the EU do’ with a quote:
“Relying on voluntary measures alone is not sufficient. We have tried that approach for decades. Now is the time to truly implement the smart mix approach by introducing clear and effective legal standards. While transparency and disclosure are integral steps of any proper due diligence, this legislation should rather focus on ensuring transparent business practices through effective liability provisions. Most importantly, any liability provisions need to both ensure effective deterrent for companies but also adequate remedy for impacted stakeholders.”
That very much sums up civil society’s views, but it was expressed by Théo Jaekel, of Ericsson in September in the European Parliament. We therefore applaud the work of the German government, Ministers Heil, Müller (and Lambrecht) in particular, for their dedication to bringing forth legislation and organising this debate. Taking up such responsibility is by no means common. It is not easy, but it is more than necessary. Victims cannot continue to be left to pay the costs of their own harm.
Secondly, I would like to explain why liability is so important.The purpose of due diligence is to help companies to meet their responsibility to respect human rights and thus contribute to the protection of human rights. A mandatory due diligence in which civil liability is absent is absurd. From a victim’s perspective, an honest title of such provision would be Catch XX, as they would be worse off than they are today. From a governance perspective it would be a twist on the agreements reached in the UN and the OECD.
Fortunately, it is the due diligence concept itself that makes the liability feasible from a legal point standpoint. As the Ministers have already alluded to, it is absolutely essential that where a failure of due diligence contributes to harm, that liability is recognised and judicial remedy made available – in line with the UN Guiding Principles. That is very far away from an idea that companies would be absolutely liable for ensuring that there are no human rights impacts in their value chain.
Liability is also important to make it clear what consequences are attached to breaking the law. It is an essential incentive for companies to take due diligence seriously. Once due diligence is embedded in their governance, most companies will make good faith efforts and do their best to try to prevent all human rights impacts irrespective of their actual liability. But potential liability is needed to get us there.
My third and last point is that “due diligence cannot be limited to any particular business relationships.It is impossible for a company to focus its efforts and resources correctly, if due diligence is restricted to the first tier of its supply chain. The most severe impacts in global value chains – deforestation, conflict minerals, forced labour - are by no means unexplored. The due diligence leads companies to focus on such severe matters (rather than minor compliance issues) , and provides a clear guidance as to the choice of an appropriate action on the basis of companies’ abilities. In these regards due diligence is a solution, not a complication.
Mr Gregor has represented Frank Bold within the Steering Group of the European Coalition for Corporate Justice. Please visit their website to read the latest briefings and updates on human rights due diligence and access to justice.
The European Court of Justice has ruled that mining at Poland’s sprawling Turów coal mine must cease while the court processes a Czech government lawsuit against Poland for illegally operating the mine. The Polish mine pushes right up to the Czech and German borders and is depleting people’s water supplies and undercutting houses in nearby communities.
Local groups and NGOs including Frank Bold, that is very active in the process, welcomed the Czech government’s decision to file a lawsuit at the European Court of Justice against the Polish government for the illegal operation of the Turów lignite coal mine, which has been dug right up to the Czech and German borders, damaging local water supplies for nearby communities. This is the first such legal case for the Czech Republic and the first in EU’s history where one member state sues another for environmental reasons.
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