Manila (UCAN): Philippine environmental groups submitted a “final memorandum” against fossil fuel producers before the country’s Commission on Human Rights ahead of the Global Climate Strike on September 20. It is a summary of scientific and legal evidence of alleged human rights violations by the corporations.
In 2015, the activist groups filed a landmark human rights case against 47 energy firms blamed for a large part of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions that have led to disastrous climate change.
Desiree Llanos Dee, climate justice campaigner of Greenpeace Philippines, said they expect the Philippine Commission on Human Rights to issue a resolution on the petition.
Dee said the resolution could be a global precedent that can be used around the world to hold the so-called Carbon Majors accountable for the impact of climate change on communities.
While the 2015 petition is a first of its kind, the memorandum is the product of a four-year investigation and is considered the biggest repository of evidence on how the fossil fuel industry “misled the public on climate change.”
“The voice of the people is not being heard in some of the climate litigation in other countries, but here in the Philippines the world heard the narratives of the victims for the first time”
It noted that as early as the 1980s the fossil fuel industry already knew that “climate change was real” yet did not act to reverse the harmful impacts of their operations.
The Philippine Commission on Human Rights has conducted 12 public hearings since the 2015 filing of the petition, hearing 39 expert resource persons and 26 community witnesses.
“The voice of the people is not being heard in some of the climate litigation in other countries, but here in the Philippines the world heard the narratives of the victims for the first time,” Dee said.
The respondents, including large oil companies and fossil fuel producers, did not participate in the process even as the investigative body went to New York and London for hearings.
Jose Luis Martin Gascon, human rights commission chairperson, said they intend to issue a final report on the issue by November, in time for the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP25, in December.
“We need to acknowledge that there are victims and that there are perpetrators in this climate crisis. And perpetrators who undermine human dignity should be held accountable,” Gascon said.
He clarified, however, that the commission’s role is to conduct a fact-finding investigation and it is not a court of law that has punitive powers that can impose penalties.
“There has to be further pursuit in other arenas,” he said.
For the first time, the Philippines will not be attending the climate change meeting.
The president, Rodrigo Duterte called it “a waste of time and money,” adding that climate change may not matter in the long run due to other global issues such as the threats of war.
On September 20, hundreds of Filipinos joined the start of the Global Climate Strike.
Franciscan Father Pete Montallana, who heads the Save Sierra Madre Network Alliance, said Filipinos need “to go beyond fear and come out against those in power who are not taking a break to destroy our common home and our future.”
He slammed the “poor participation” of Church people in the climate strike. “We cannot just pray inside a church and do nothing.”