casebook

Callejas v. Law No 406 – On Unconstitutionality of Mining Concession (Panama)

Panama

The Supreme Court of Panama decisively rejects State contracts that threaten the right to a healthy environment.

Credit: ad_foto, Stock photo ID:614651196

Casebook Info

In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court of Panama rendered a decisive verdict on the intricate balance between fundamental rights and private investment interests. Emphasizing the paramount importance of safeguarding rights and obligations already established by the Panamanian State, the court underscored the imperative of ensuring a pristine environment and upholding international environmental norms.

This landmark decision reaffirmed the State’s obligation to uphold the sanctity of a healthy environment and adhere to globally recognized environmental standards, asserting that the pursuit of private investments should never supersede the foundational values enshrined within the Panamanian Constitution.

  • Year Filed 2023
  • Year of Most Recent Ruling 2023
  • Year of Final Ruling 2023
  • Jurisdiction Panama
  • Court Name Supreme Court of Panama
  • Plaintiff(s) Juan Ramón Sevillano Callejas
  • Ruling On Merits and Procedure
  • Respondent(s) Government
  • Outcome Decided
  • Decision Link to the decision/ruling

Background

The State of Panama and mining company Mineria Panama, S.A. had a decades-long contractual history. In 2023, the Executive branch drafted a concession contract between State and Minera Panamá, S.A., that granted the company exclusive rights to explore, extract, exploit, benefit, process, refine, transport, sell and commercialize copper and its associated minerals in an area located in various townships in the province of Colón. The contract included improved economic, labor, and environmental duties relative to a prior contact between the parties, which had been declared procedurally flawed and therefore void by the Supreme Court.

That same year, Juan Callejas, a citizen acting on his own behalf, filed a action of unconstitutionality against Law No. 406 of October 2023, through which the National Assembly had approved the mining contract. The plaintiff claimed that the negotiation process led by the Executive and approved by the Legislature, as well as the contractual clauses themselves, violated constitutional articles related to due process, social welfare and public interest.

The Court agreed and held that the negotiation process led by the Executive Branch and approved by the Legislative Branch, as well as the contractual clauses themselves omitted the due diligence and management that domestic and international regulations have established as essential obligations. Going much further than what the plaintiff claimed, the Court held that the law violated twenty-five substantive and procedural constitutional guarantees. Among them were arts. 4 (public participation and access to justice); 17 (protection of human life); 56 (protection of children); 109 (right to health); 118 (right to a healthy environment (R2HE)); 119 (sustainable development); 120 (rational use in the exploitation of natural resources); 121 (environmental precautionary principle); 258 and 290 (insusceptibility of state property to private appropriation and other States), and 298 (freedom of economic competition and markets). This was because the negotiation and contract gave preferential and priority treatment to Minera Panamá, S.A. by granting benefits and permissions that did not further the constituently mandated the principle of a common good.

While the R2HE permeated throughout the Court’s opinion, the Court also undertook an in-depth analysis of the right, concluding that “faced with the dilemma presented, in which the human right to a healthy environment must be weighed against the right to the protection of economic investment, the balance of the Plenary of the Supreme Court of Justice will naturally lean towards safeguarding the continuity of the human race […].”

  • 25 The number of articles that Law No. 406 violated, according to the Supreme Court
  • 12,955.1 Hectares Area to which the company was given mining rights over
  • 12 The number of amicus briefs that invoked the R2HE

Plaintiff Strategies & Court Good Practices

Using an established domestic body of law

Using an established domestic body of law

Both the plaintiff and the Court used the constitution and environmental law as an anchor.

As is often the case, the Court first used the potential breach of constitutional rights to establish its jurisdiction. The Court particularly highlighted the importance of its role in the face of omissions by those other branches of the State who had the responsibility to protect such rights, as it was the case here. It concluded, “that is to say, this decision behaves as a correction to such omission, exercising the function of police power […].”

The Court also used the constitution and its history to construct its framing of the case. It explained that, through its protections, the Constitution balances the public utility of exploiting natural resources with the promotion of the public interest of the State and the rights of citizens. More specifically, it explained that “the human right to a healthy environment and the exercise of economic activities and private investment are operations that can coexist jointly, as long as both the State and the companies fulfill a role of respect for human rights.” Because of this, the Court reasoned, its own role was to weigh such interests in specific cases. It concluded that “having carried out the weighing of the constitutional values in collision […] the protection of the right to life, health and the environment of future generations takes precedence over any other right of an economic nature, including the right to investment.”

The Court centered the R2HE in its balancing analysis because “without access to a healthy environment, the human being will irremediably lose his environment and means of subsistence, so that any effort to protect the other constitutional and conventional guarantees and rights that have been mentioned throughout this decision, including the right to life, will become ineffective.” While emphasizing that the R2HE – enshrined in art. 118 – is an individual human right, the Court highlighted the interdependence between the R2HE and other fundamental rights.

In explaining how the R2HE and other fundamental rights may be balanced with economic rights, the Court notably delved into the relationship between States and companies. It explained that to promote social and economic development that prevents environmental pollution, maintains the ecological balance and avoids the destruction of ecosystems, public contracts, like the one in question, cannot be treated in the same manner as contracts between private parties. In other words, they cannot be understood as a pact between equals, in which the parties simply agree on the clauses they consider to be mutually beneficial. Public contracts must be understood as an agreement in which the private party accepts or declines the conditions established by the State, in consideration of the social welfare and the public interest. To ensure the proper substance of the contract, the negotiation and drafting process must follow paths predefined by the legislator, which are inspired by constitutional rights and principles.

In this case, the Court concluded, neither Minera Panamá, S.A., nor the Executive and Legislative branches followed the pre-established legal framework that spells out the phases and stages of the administrative and legislative process to be followed in the establishment of any investment relationship with the State. For example, among many errors, there was no public bidding process; Minera Panamá, S.A. was simply chosen due to its contractual history with the State. In addition, the mining concession was approved on the basis of an outdated twelve-year-old environmental impact assessment (EIA) that also failed to provide access to information and public participation. In the contract clauses themselves, furthermore, the “State is the one that is legally subordinated to the private party,” with public competencies and powers being granted to the company.

Because these errors violated twenty-five substantive and procedural constitutional guarantees – ranging from due process to the right to life and the R2HE – the Court declared Law No. 406 of October 2023 that approved the contract unconstitutional, and therefore, the contract void.

Connecting R2HE to the rights of nature (RoN)

Connecting R2HE to the rights of nature (RoN)

The Court explained that weighing of the R2HE and economic rights must not only be done from an anthropogenic point of view, but also from the perspective of rights of nature. It explained that through Law No 287 of February 24, 2022, Panama granted nature the status of a subject of law. This implied that the State must have the necessary public policies to ensure “the best interest of nature” for its intrinsic value and regardless of the utilitarian value it has for human beings. Therefore, the State has the obligation to ensure its protection, respect, permanence, restoration, maintenance and regeneration of its vital cycles, as well as the conservation of its ecological structures and functions.

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

Throughout its analysis, the Court drew direct connections between specific constitutional articles and their international counterparts, emphasizing Panama’s role as a member of the international community. It explained that, although Panama has become a signatory of international economic and investment agreements, such as the Free Trade Agreement and the Bilateral Investment Treaty, “when economic rights collide with rights related to the protection of the right to health and life, the State must necessarily prioritize the latter […].”

Specifically, the Court noted that the Constitution recognized the importance of respecting international agreements mandating that economic activities be sustainable in light of the protection of the environment. It reiterated that the 2004 constitutional reforms led to the inclusion of articles that establish respect for international law norms, especially those respecting human rights. The Court further explained that the rights and guarantees enshrined in the Constitution must be considered as a minimum threshold of protection for fundamental rights and the dignity of the person. If international law to which the State has subscribed offers higher protection, the obligations of the State are “extended” to these.

The Court then referred to the various international conventions and guidelines that Panama adopted on environmental protection to inform the standards of protection to which Panama was obliged. These included the American Convention on Human Rights and San Salvador Protocol; the Regional Agreement on Access to Information, Public Participation and Justice in Environmental Matters in Latin America and the Caribbean; the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change; and the Convention on Biological Diversity Act No. 2 of 1995; and the Sustainable Development Goals. It also mentioned general principles of international environmental law that were interconnected with the environmental precepts established in the Constitution and in international law. These included the principles of indivisibility; prevention; precaution; non-regression and sustainable development.

The Court explained that abiding by these instruments meant even if Panama possessed insufficient domestic human rights and environmental protections, its relationship with a contracting company would be under the umbrella of such international protections. Further, the Court explained, companies have individual responsibility to respect human rights, regardless of their “size, sector, operational context, ownership and structure.”

“Putting Panama’s nature at stake is non-negotiable, especially when our country is a subscriber to multiple national and international instruments that protect the environment,” the Court concluded.

Emphasizing international developments

Emphasizing international developments

In its discussion of international law, the Court highlighted recent relevant developments. It specifically pointed to the 2023 pronouncements of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on corporate responsibility, through which it recommended to Panama to “effectively enforce environmental regulations and complete social, environmental and human rights impact assessments prior to the licensing of development and natural resource exploitation projects.”

The Court also emphasized the 2022 UN General Assembly’s Resolution 76/300, signed by Panama and which recognized the R2HE as a standalone human right. It explained that the Resolution emphasized the importance of procedural elements to protect the R2HE and recalled the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, which highlight the responsibility of companies to respect human rights.

Emphasizing the State’s duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

Emphasizing the State's duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

The Court explained that the State, as the guardian of development of the national economy has historically sought to regulate its assets to ensure their protection. This is represented in the constitution, according to which the State shall regulate, supervise and apply the necessary public policies to ensure that the use of the environment, including non-renewable natural resources, is consistent with the preservation of the environment. It is also included in the international law adopted by Panama, such as the San Salvador Protocol.

For this, the Court explained, the State has created a structure in which each administrative and legislative procedural stage allows the competent government authority to manage the mining process according to the best interests of the state. In this context, the Court clarified that “the sovereignty of the State, although absolute in the management of its resources, is limited to the protection of the environment, and not to cause damage through the actions carried out for the economic development of the country.” In this case, by getting involved in the drafting of the contract, as opposed to merely approving or disapproving it, the National Assembly went beyond the scope of its power.

The Court also explained that the duty to regulate public resources and services also forbids the State from delegating the duty to private entities, as it had been the case with certain services in this situation. On the other hand, companies, in their management and in the development of their economic activity, cannot leave the task of protecting human rights to the discretion of the contracting State.

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

The Court emphasized both domestic and international cooperation and collaboration. In explaining the State’s duty to regulate, the Court highlighted that, according to the constitution, “power emanates from the people, but that grants a delegation or representation so that the country is governed and administered by the Executive, the Legislative and the Judicial Organs, who act separately, but in harmonious collaboration.” In this case, the Court explains, the other branches of government affronted the separations of power by repeating the errors of the prior contract between Minera Panamá, S.A. and the State, which the Court had once before declared unconstitutional.

The obligation to cooperate also stems from international law, principles, and agreements the Court explained. It cited the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, which declared that “all countries, large or small, should deal in a spirit of cooperation and on an equal footing with international questions relating to the protection and improvement of the environment […].” The Court also concludes that to be a good international community member, Panama must follow the principles of international cooperation and shared but differentiated responsibility for the environment.

Methods for ensuring baseline protections

Generally speaking, and as stated above, the Court made clear that constitutional law served as a minimum threshold of protection of the R2HE and other fundamental rights. International law served to complement and heightened such protections. However, the Cabinet Resolutions through which the Cabinet Council approved the execution of the contract, the Court explained, alluded to conversations not based on a law but on “exorbitant powers” and “good faith,” and that were therefore insufficient to protect fundamental rights.

In addition, the Court explained the contract itself did not provide clear metrics for the guarantee of the R2HE, such as by providing the unclear and insufficient metric that the company “will guarantee the supply of sufficient drinking water for the subsistence of those natural persons who have legally been occupying affected areas as of February 28, 1997.” The Court also explained that the contract showed no evidence of the inclusion of regulations that obliged the company to establish strict measures to prevent environmental damage, limiting the contract to establishing a reactive regime that would come into effect only after potentially irreparable damage was caused.

Focusing on youth

Focusing on youth

In finding the contractual process to violate of the right to public participation, the Court invoked General Comment No. 26 issued by the Committee on the Rights of the Child that same year. It explained that the Comment highlighted the right of children to be heard. In it, the Committee emphasized that “Children identify environmental issues as being highly important to their lives. Children’s voices are a powerful global force for environmental protection, and their views add relevant perspectives and experience with respect to decision-making on environmental matters at all levels.” The Court agreed and stated that “as children are a vulnerable group and the future of the Nation, they should not be deprived of the human right to a sustainable environment and the State is obliged to guarantee it through the scrupulous exercise of its constitutional and legal powers by the State authorities.” Partly because the Constitution integrates Article 12 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child – granting children the right of participation –, and the contract did not follow it, it was declared procedurally flawed.

The Court also held that the law in question violated the constitutional duty of the State to protect the physical, mental and moral health of children and adolescents and to guarantee their right to food, health, education, social security and social welfare, a precept also related to the environmental precautionary principle referred to above. Notably, the Court used the issue of youth rights to introduce the topic of climate change and a safe climate. In this regard, the Court held that, by virtue of the environmental precautionary principle, Article 24(2) of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the “Executive, when entering into this mining concession contract, should have safeguarded the best interests of the children, with respect to their right to health and a healthy environment, foreseeing the impacts that an open-pit mine may generate in their integral development.”

Invoking the political significance of the R2HE

Invoking the political significance of the R2HE

The Court framed the Constitution and the international law that Panama has ascribed to as embodying Panama’s “country vision.” This vision includes government that is unitary, republican, democratic and representative. In this context, the Court explained that the R2HE is not only a duty, but is a value, a motivation and a pillar of the identity of Panamanian society.

The Court emphasized that legislative functions have democratic legitimacy as long as they serve the public interest. Representatives in a position of power, however, may neglect to look after the welfare of those they represent, and disturb or violate the rights of minorities or the majority. It is precisely because of this, the Court explained that the State instituted a process of assessment of constitutionality. Through this process, the Court may contain and remedy the possible excesses of the legislator.

Using amicus curiae briefs advance the R2HE conceptually

Using amicus curiae briefs advance the R2HE conceptually

Ninety total amicus briefs – in support of both the plaintiff and company – were submitted. Over a dozen amicus briefs in favor of the plaintiff invoked the R2HE.

Take Aways

  • States must protect R2HE and comply with international environmental norms and duties in doing so, highlighting the significance of upholding the sanctity of environmental standards.
  • Private investment endeavors must not take precedence over the core principles enshrined in the constitution, emphasizing the need to prioritize foundational values over economic interests. 
  • R2HE is especially apt at protecting the interests of youth. 

Terms

Strategy

Connecting R2HE to the rights of nature (RoN)

Recognizing that R2HE includes protections for nature and the “rights of nature” in virtue of its intrinsic value, not solely because it holds instrumental value for human use. This strategy makes full achievement of R2HE dependent on the recognition and defense of nature’s rights.
Strategy

Emphasizing international developments

Referencing or examining recent international legal developments related to R2HE in order to support the protection of R2HE. International developments may include emerging case law, policy evolution, state practice, regional agreements or international treaties, among others. Commonly referenced international developments include, for example, the Paris Agreement and the UN Resolutions on R2HE.
Strategy

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

Underscoring the need for governments, sub-governments and other actors to coordinate, cooperate and commonly work toward effective protection of R2HE. This strategy may emphasize the need for cooperation at the domestic level, international level or both, and can entail varying levels of specificity.
Strategy

Emphasizing the State's duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

Invoking a government’s affirmative obligations under national and/or international law to regulate and implement policy to advance and monitor the protection of R2HE. One common instance of this strategy appears in the climate change context, where a plaintiff might argue that the government has taken insufficient action to mitigate climate change or reduce emissions. Another common context is that of corporate pollution, which might prompt a plaintiff to argue the government did not do enough to ensure a polluter’s compliance with environmental standards.
Strategy

Focusing on youth

Emphasizing the disproportionate and inequitable vulnerability of young people, children and/or future generations to climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental degradation. This emphasis is often articulated through the principles of Intergenerational Equity and Sustainable Development, which generally provide that governments and other entities must ensure the basic needs and rights of future generations when making decisions that bear on the environment. Additionally, the principles suggest that all individuals have a responsibility to care for future generations by limiting environmental degradation and consumption in the present.
Strategy

Invoking the political significance of the R2HE

Recognizing R2HE’s political weight and implications may entail emphasizing the linkage between – and/or mutual reinforcement of – R2HE and other democratic values. These common imperatives include public participation, access to justice and equity in environmental decision-making.  Additionally, this strategy involves invoking R2HE to guide the formation and enforcement of public policy.
Strategy

Using amicus curiae briefs advance the R2HE conceptually

Submitting amicus curiae – documents written by third parties interested in the case who are neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants, and who wish to submit arguments to the Court – in order to bolster and advance arguments supporting and in defense of R2HE. Amicus curiae may relate to a case’s facts, context and/or the arguments presented.
Strategy

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

Relying on well-established international treaties, norms and principles in making arguments advancing and protecting R2HE. Commonly cited international bodies of law include UN Reports, jurisprudence from international and/or regional courts, General Comments by UN bodies, Declarations and more.

Action of Unconstitutionality

A legal mechanism in some judicial systems that allows for the challenge and review of laws, regulations, or governmental actions that are alleged to violate the constitution.

Anthropocentrism

Anthropocentrism refers to the philosophical perspective assigning humans a special status and/or value above all other organisms, entities and the environment itself. Discourse, arguments and systems that identify humans – implicitly or explicitly – as the center of moral consideration are anthropocentric. This perspective often entails the belief that human interests, needs and welfare should be prioritized over those of other species or the environment.

Environmental Impact Assessments

A process used in environmental management to evaluate the potential environmental consequences or impacts of proposed projects, policies, plans, or developments before they are carried out. The primary goal of an EIA is to identify, predict, and mitigate any adverse effects that these activities might have on the environment. It often involves modeling potential harms and exploring alternatives, if any, to avoid them.

Indivisibility Principle

This principle recognizes the interconnectedness and interdependence of all human rights. It asserts that civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights are all equally important and interconnected, forming an indivisible and interrelated system of human rights. This principle emphasizes that no right should take precedence over another and that they are all essential for the dignity, well-being and full development of individuals and societies.

Non-regression Principle

This principle of environmental and human rights law provides that governments cannot reduce existing levels of environmental protection unless doing so is strictly necessary to protect another fundamental right. Where such regressions are necessary, they must be proportional to the stipulated goal. Therefore, this principle protects against backsliding in the environmental governance, conservation and protection contexts.

Police Power

In the context of law, “police power” refers to the inherent authority of a government to enact laws and regulations to promote the health, safety, morals, and general welfare of the community.

Precautionary Principle

This environmental law principle provides that, where there exists a risk of serious and/or irreversible harm, scientific uncertainty about the extent of the harm or about the exact consequences of a particular action or process does not justify failing to implement measures to combat associated risks of environmental degradation or destruction. In other words, in the face of scientific uncertainty, authorities should still take measures to address environmental threats.

Prevention Principle

This environmental law principle provides that states and other actors must take meaningful steps to avoid environmental harms before they occur. In other words, if there is a tangible risk of environmental harm that is imminent and demands an emergency response, authorities are obliged to implement the necessary measures before damage is caused to the environment.

Principle / Duty of International Cooperation

The obligation of states to collaborate and coordinate their actions to address common challenges, promote peace, security, human rights, and development, and uphold international legal norms. This duty is grounded in various sources of international law, including treaties, customary international law, and principles recognized by international organizations such as the United Nations.

Rights of Nature

The concept of "rights of nature" is centered on the idea that natural entities, such as ecosystems, rivers, forests, or other natural elements, should possess legal rights just like humans do. This perspective suggests that nature itself should have intrinsic rights to exist, thrive, and evolve, independent of its usefulness to humans.

Shared But Differentiated Responsibility

A principle in international law that recognizes that while all states are responsible for addressing global issues such as environmental protection, climate change, and sustainable development, they do not share the same level of responsibility due to differences in their contributions to the problem and their capabilities to address it. This principle aims to balance equity and fairness in international agreements and actions.

Sustainable Development

This concept provides that states should pursue measures that allow present generations to meet their essential needs without compromising the ability of future generations to do the same. Moreover, it recognizes the need for states to work towards their economic development while also ensuring the realization and protection of fundamental human rights. In some jurisdictions, sustainable development is regarded as a guiding principle, while in others, it is treated as a right with binding consequences.