Corporation for the Sustainable Development of the Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina v. National Agency of Hydrocarbons
Colombia
The R2HE as a key right to protect the archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina.
Casebook Info
The Colombian National Agency of Hydrocarbons (the Defendant) granted permission to three oil companies to explore and extract oil within the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve (Seaflower), situated in the protected archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina. Colombia had ratified and implemented the international Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Subsequently, the archipelago was designated as a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve and a special Marine Protected Area (MPA) under Colombian law. In order to preserve this area of “special ecological, economic, social, and cultural importance,” CORALINA (the Plaintiff), a regional government agency responsible for establishing and managing the Seaflower Reserve and MPA, filed an Acción Popular (Popular Action) against the Defendant. The Plaintiff alleged that the oil leases violated Colombia’s CBD commitments and infringed upon the rights of indigenous residents, safeguarded by both national and international instruments.
Year Filed
2011
Year of Most Recent Ruling
2012
Year of Final Ruling
2012
Jurisdiction
Colombia
Court Name
Administrative Court of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina
Plaintiff(s)
Corporation for the Sustainable Development of the Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina
Ruling On
Merits
Respondent(s)
National Agency of Hydrocarbons (NAH)
In 1994, Colombia ratified the CBD and codified it domestically as Law 165. By 2000, Seaflower became part of the UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves, with its MPA ranking among the world’s top ten largest. This site stood as a treasure trove of biodiversity and cultural significance, boasting over 76% of Colombia’s coral reefs and serving as the ancestral home of the Raizal Indigenous Peoples. In 2005, the Plaintiffs established the Seaflower MPA in collaboration with local communities, creating a distinctive participatory model that gained widespread international acclaim.
Despite its extensive protection and global recognition, the Defendant granted oil exploration and extraction leases to three companies – ECOPETROL, REPSOL and YPF – within the boundaries of Seaflower. In response, the Plaintiff filed an Acción Popular, aiming to safeguard collective and constitutional rights and interests concerning the environment, health, home, and public safety. Citing national and international commitments and protections, the Plaintiffs contended that these oil leases would inevitably lead to environmental degradation. They argued that the leases violated (1) R2HE; (2) the collective right to ecological equilibrium; (3) the management and prudent utilization of natural resources to ensure their sustainable development, preservation, restoration or substitution; and (4) the protection of ecosystems.
Finding for the Plaintiffs, the court acknowledged that the exploration leases imperiled certain rights, including R2HE. The Defendants were ordered to halt oil exploration and extraction in the areas where leases had previously been granted. However, the court did not grant the Plaintiff’s request that the Defendant be forbidden from leasing protected lands in the future. Although recognizing the potential threats posed by oil exploration and extraction to marine species and biodiversity hotspots, the court deemed the Plaintiff’s request for this particular relief beyond the purview of the class action. Instead, the court suggested that recourse to prohibit future leasing lay within the jurisdiction of the national government.
Acción Popular
A special constitutionally grounded legal action may be brought to protect collective rights associated with “the homeland, space, public safety and health, administrative morality [and] the environment” among others.
Indigenous Partnerships
The Plaintiff, CORALINA, had a unique and internationally recognized partnership with the local Raizal peoples before the suit in management of the protected areas. Continuing that relationship, the Raizal joined the suit to protect their homelands.
67%
The percentage of Colombia’s coral reefs in the protected areas illustrates how delicate the ecosystem open for oil leasing was.
Plaintiff Strategies & Court Good Practices
Using an established domestic body of law
The Plaintiffs leveraged the legal mechanism of “Acción Popular” bestowed upon Colombian citizens by the National Constitution. This instrument empowers Colombians to pursue the safeguarding of collective and specified rights linked to public health and the environment. It aims to eliminate hazards and threats to those rights while reinstating conditions to their former state. Three of the Plaintiff’s legal claims—namely, R2HE, the right to ecological equilibrium and the responsible management and use of natural resources—were firmly rooted in domestic laws and constitutional rights.
The Colombian Constitution, encompassing Articles 8, 79, 95, and 310, in conjunction with Decree 2811, Law 164 of 1994, and Law 99 of 1993, protect the environmental rights of individuals and communities. These provisions mandate adherence to the precautionary principle and sustainable development in environmental initiatives. The court’s verdict established that the oil leases breached Colombian mandates for sustainable development, emphasizing the failure to abide by principles of precaution, prevention, and intergenerational equity.
Using an established international body of law to support R2HE
The lawsuit claimed that the oil leases were in violation of the CBD, the Rio de Janeiro Convention, the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention (ILO Convention 169), and the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. Both the CBD and ILO Convention 169 had been incorporated into domestic law, and the plaintiffs relied on the legal obligations and defining principles of these treaties. The Plaintiff’s third and fourth claims were the product of international treaties. In rendering its decision, the court drew upon international definitions of sustainable development and referenced the Framework Convention on Climate Change, emphasizing the imperative of precautionary measures in shaping environmental policies.
Utilizing a variety of legal arguments
The Plaintiff strategically invoked both domestic and international obligations when advocating for environmental and indigenous rights. While emphasizing the project’s potential impact on the environment, the Plaintiff collaborated with the Raizal people, who joined the class action over concerns about the significant repercussions on their way of life. Despite this, the court addressed the Indigenous People’s claims only tangentially, acknowledging the significance of the Reserve for the Raizal but refraining from providing further analysis.
Take Aways
The court recognized that oil activities within the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve and the MPA had the potential to strain natural resources and disrupt the ecosystem, thereby endangering people’s fundamental rights to health, life, and a healthy environment. However, the ruling fell short in establishing a definitive connection between the local Indigenous Peoples and the ecosystem’s integrity. Additionally, it didn’t preclude the future allocation of oil leases, leaving that possibility open despite the acknowledged risks to the environment and fundamental rights.
Terms
Element
Healthy Biodiversity and Ecosystems
R2HE includes healthy biodiversity and ecosystems among its substantive elements. This internationally recognized right encompasses the entitlement of individuals and communities to live in a balanced environment that supports diverse and thriving ecosystems. It necessitates safeguarding and preserving ecological diversity, ensuring the resilience and well-being of ecosystems and promoting the sustainability of natural habitats for present and future generations. Additionally, this right entails the protection of various species, habitats and ecological processes essential to the maintenance of a healthy and functional environment.
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
Reinforcing the status of the R2HE as a fundamental and independent human right
Recognizing R2HE as a standalone human right – that is, a human right that does not depend on or emerge from any other human right or source, but which exists independently and self-sufficiently. Recognition of R2HE as a fundamental and independent human right can be accomplished, for example, by invoking the UN Resolutions on R2HE.
Strategy
Using an established domestic body of law
Invoking well-established national laws, norms and/or legal principles in support of arguments related to R2HE. Where R2HE is present in a country’s constitution, the constitution will serve as the primary authoritative source for the right. Other, secondary sources of established domestic law commonly include statutory law and requirements governing public participation and/or the assessment of environmental risks. Environmental principles enshrined in domestic sources of law – for example, the precautionary principle – may also be emphasized to further the protection of R2HE.
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.
Strategy
Utilizing a variety of legal arguments
Asserting numerous and diverse legal claims arising out of different bodies of law to increase the likelihood that at least one of the plaintiff’s arguments will succeed before the court. This could take the form, for instance, of a plaintiff bringing both an administrative challenge and a challenge based on the violation of their fundamental rights.
Good Practices
Methods for ensuring baseline protections
Courts have employed various strategies, mechanisms and approaches to establish fundamental environmental safeguards, minimum standards and/or quality levels which are necessary to guarantee R2HE. These approaches aim to ensure a basic level of protection for individuals, communities and/or the environment. Further, courts have developed various methods to assess the appropriateness of government and corporate action relative to the baseline environmental standards. These methods can vary widely in form and across jurisdictions, but may take the form of a presumption in favor of the environment, the examination of long-term consequences or the application of environmental principles like that of non-regression.
Good Practices
Providing remedies
Provision of remedies is the process by which courts, after finding that a legal right has been violated or harmed, offer or provide a resolution or solution to address the harm or injustice suffered by the aggrieved party. Appropriate and effective judicial remedies play a key role in ensuring that R2HE materially protects individuals and all aspects of the environment. Remedies can vary widely in number, specificity, urgency and stringency, and those variations bear closely on whether a given remedy adequately redresses the original harm. Frequent remedies include protection and restoration measures, compensation and the creation of compliance or implementation mechanisms.
Intergenerational Equity
This international and environmental law principle provides that States and other entities must regard the impact of their public policies on the environment on present and future generations equally. In other words, actions that allow present generations to meet their needs and wants but sacrifice the ability of future generations to meet their basic needs and live lives of dignity contravene Intergenerational Equity.
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.
Sustainable Development
This concept and guiding principle 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. Consequently, a state seeking to achieve Sustainable Development goals is not excused from compliance with its human rights obligations, such as the duty to guarantee the R2HE.