Friends of the Earth (Netherlands) v Royal Dutch Shell: Human Rights and the Obligations of Corporations in the Hague District Court Decision | Public policy blog (2024)

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Dr Annalisa Savaresi, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Law, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, University of Stirling

Dr Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh, Assistant Professor of Public International Law, Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden University

Friends of the Earth (Netherlands) v Royal Dutch Shell: Human Rights and the Obligations of Corporations in the Hague District Court Decision | Public policy blog (1)

After its landmark ruling in theUrgenda case in 2015, on 25 May 2021 the Hague District Court marked another milestone in the history of climate litigation worldwide byorderingRoyal Dutch Shell to reduce its CO2 emissions of 45% by 2030, compared to 2019 levels. The ruling is significant in enforcing both environmental and human rights obligations on a corporation.

The judgement was issued after a group of environmental organizations – including Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace amongst others – asked the Court to rule that Shell should reduce its emissions, in accordance with the global temperature goal enshrined in the Paris Agreement and in accordance with the best available climate science.

As in Urgenda, the applicants relied on Dutch tort law to construe Shell’s duty of care in light of the rights to life and to respect for private and family life, as enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights and in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The Court relied on ‘the widespread international consensus that human rights offer protection

against the impacts of dangerous climate change and that companies must respect human rights.’ It found that Shell has a responsibility to act in accordance with the temperature goal in the Paris Agreement. This finding is especially significant because Shell is a private actor and as such, not bound by any obligations under the Paris Agreement. Equally significant is the Court’s finding that Shell’s responsibility to act in line with the Paris Agreement is based on the recognition that businesses must respect human rights, irrespective of the actions of States.

The Court did not hesitate to rely on theUN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights(UNGP), despite their status as ‘soft law’ instruments. The Court brushed aside concerns about the legal status of the Principles, by asserting that since 2011, ‘the European Commission has expected European businesses to meet their responsibilities to respect human rights, as formulated in the UNGP.’ The Court deemed this to be sufficient basis to use the UNGP to interpret Shell’s standard of care. Indeed, the Court went as far as saying that ‘the responsibility of business enterprises to respect human rights, as formulated in theGuiding Principles, is a global standard of expected conduct for all business enterprises wherever they operate.’

Even within the Netherlands, while the judgement is provisionally enforceable, it will set a legal precedent only if the higher courts uphold on appeal, which Shell has already announced it would pursue. However, such a formalistic assessment does not do justice to the impact of the case on legal action and adjudication around the world. It is highly likely that the decision will inspire other legal initiatives and even judicial reasoning in similar cases. The field of climate litigation is characterised by transnational collaboration and judicial dialogue; litigants around the world are inspired by innovative strategies and legal arguments that have been used in other jurisdictions and the judiciary likewise draws inspiration from climate judgements that have been delivered elsewhere. The decision of The Hague District Court in theUrgendacase, forexample, was cited by courts around the world in their decisions on other climate cases – even while an appeal was pending.Urgendaalso inspired numerous other cases, including in Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Ireland, South Korea, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, which use similar legal arguments. Court victories were achieved in several of these cases. Against this backdrop, there is reason to be hopeful about this decision’s potential to mark a new era in rights-based climate litigation, whereby fossil fuel companies are being held to account for disrespecting their human rights obligations and climate goals.

As we notedelsewhere, human rights here serve as a ‘filler’ to plug the accountability gap left by international and national law. The Paris Agreement itself provides little means to hold state and corporate actors to account for failing to deliver on the promised emission reductions. The same may be said about national climate legislation, which often does not provide measures to hold public authorities and private actors accountable for failing to meet emission reduction targets. Before climate change law rises to these challenges, litigants around the world increasingly invoke human rights to prompt state and corporate actors to reduce emissions (mitigation), or to prevent and redress harm associated with the impacts of climate change (adaptation or compensation).

The plaintiffs in this case did not seek compensation, but rather a change in policy to ‘prevent dangerous climate change’. This may seem surprising, as court battles are often about compensation for harm. However, focusing on prevention is by no means a novel strategy in the field of rights-based climate litigation. In fact, most rights-based climate cases pursued thus far seek either a change in climate or energy policies or target highly polluting projects and are less concerned with addressing the actual impacts of climate change. After the landmark ‘Carbon majors inquiry’ carried out by the Philippines Human Rights Commission, this is the first time such a forward-looking strategy has been used successfully against a corporation.

The end game is that to achieve change in the practice of law and create the tools to ensure that states and corporate actors reduce emissions. In this connection, the judgement has marked a major milestone in the history of climate litigation worldwide, by filling in a gap in corporate climate accountability. It also represents an important development for the law on business and human rights, as it acknowledges that corporations already have an obligation to comply with human rights law. This development is most significant at a time when the EU is developing human rightscorporate due diligence and accountability legislation, and aninternational treaty on transnational corporations and other business enterprises with respect to human rightsis under negotiation.

This post first appeared on the website of The Global Network for Human Rights and the Environment

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Friends of the Earth (Netherlands) v Royal Dutch Shell: Human Rights and the Obligations of Corporations in the Hague District Court Decision | Public policy blog (2024)

FAQs

What was the Dutch court decision against Shell? ›

WHAT WAS THE RULING? The district court in The Hague ordered Shell in 2021 to cut its absolute carbon emissions by 45% by 2030 compared to 2019 levels. The reduction includes emissions from the use of fuels sold to customers, which account for around 95% of Shell's emissions.

What is the Shell court ruling on emissions? ›

In a landmark ruling that shocked the energy sector, a lower Dutch court in 2021 ordered Shell to reduce its planet warming carbon emissions by 45% by 2030 from 2019 levels. The order related not only to Shell's own emissions, but also to those caused by the buyers and users of its products around the globe.

What is the Shell case in the Netherlands? ›

Milieudefensie v Royal Dutch Shell (2021) is a human rights law and tort law case heard by the district court of The Hague in the Netherlands in 2021 related to efforts by several NGO's to curtail carbon dioxide emissions by multinational corporations.

What are the human rights in the Netherlands? ›

This includes a ban on discrimination (the first article of the Netherlands), the freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom of assembly and the right to privacy. These are limitations on government, which citizens can enforce these classical civil rights directly at the judge.

What is the Shell human rights case? ›

The High Court has ruled that 13,000 Nigerian fishermen and farmers at the centre of a major oil pollution case against Shell can bring claims for breaches of their right to a clean environment under Nigerian constitutional law.

Did Shell get sued? ›

A lawsuit against the board of directors of the UK's energy giant Shell has been thrown out of court, preventing ClientEarth, an environmental law charity, from pursuing derivative action over the alleged failure of the oil major's board to put in place the right decarbonization and net zero tools to move the energy ...

What is the lawsuit against Shell directors? ›

Court fails to engage with key climate risk arguments in Shell directors case dismissal. LONDON – The Court of Appeal has refused to hear ClientEarth's historic lawsuit against Shell's Board of Directors – the first derivative action worldwide to seek to hold directors personally liable for climate risk mismanagement.

Why did Shell leave the Netherlands? ›

Why is the oil giant Shell moving its headquarters from The Hague to the UK? - Quora. There seem to be three factors. First, the dual-company model makes many financial manoeuvres difficult - things like share buy-backs. Second, the Netherlands imposes additional taxation on dividends (a “withholding tax”.

What is the climate change case against Shell? ›

In February 2023, environmental law group ClientEarth filed a claim with the High Court in England against Shell plc and the current Board of Directors challenging the board's decision-making regarding Shell's climate strategy. This is a derivative action brought by shareholders on behalf of the Company.

Which country owns Royal Dutch Shell? ›

The “Shell” Transport and Trading Company, a U.K.-registered company, has a 40% interest in the group, and the remaining 60% is owned by the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company, a Netherlands company. Collectively, the group is involved in oil and gas exploration, production, refining, transportation, and marketing.

Why is Royal Dutch Shell changing its name? ›

Oil and gas major Shell has officially changed its name to Shell plc, after deciding to simplify its share structure, move the headquarters from the Netherlands to the UK and, as a result, remove the Royal Dutch designation from its name.

What's the difference between Shell and Royal Dutch Shell? ›

The slash was removed from the name "Royal Dutch/Shell" in 2005, concurrent with moves to merge the two legally separate companies (Royal Dutch and Shell) to the single legal entity which exists today. On 15 November 2021, Royal Dutch Shell plc announced plans to change its name to Shell plc.

Does the Netherlands have good human rights? ›

For many, The Hague is also synonymous with its international courts, including the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice. Freedom House gives the Netherlands 97 out of 100 on the Global Freedom Scale. Nevertheless, the country also faces some key issues and human rights violations.

Has the UN ever cited the Netherlands for human rights violations? ›

GENEVA (29 December 2020) – In a ground-breaking decision, the Human Rights Committee has found that the Netherlands violated a child's rights by registering "nationality unknown" in his civil records as this left him unable under Dutch law to be registered as stateless and therefore be given international protection ...

What does "Dutch" mean in English? ›

Dutch means relating to or belonging to the Netherlands, or to its people, language, or culture.

Did Shell lose the Dutch court case over the Nigeria oil spills? ›

The appeals court said Shell had not proven "beyond reasonable doubt" that the oil spills had been caused by sabotage, rather than poor maintenance. "This makes Shell Nigeria responsible for the damage caused by the leaks," the court said.

What did the Dutch Supreme Court rule in its Urgenda decision? ›

The Supreme Court issued its rejection of the appeal on 20 December 2019 and upholding the 25% reduction requirement. In its ruling, the Supreme Court affirmed that the Dutch government was responsible for management of carbon dioxide emissions for the country and was bound to protect human rights.

What happened to Royal Dutch Shell? ›

Shell officially changed its name on Friday, ditching “Royal Dutch”, which has been part of its identity since 1907, following plans to scrap its dual share structure and move its head office from the Netherlands to Britain. “Shell announced the Board's decision to change its name to Shell plc on December 20, 2021.

What are the accusations against Shell? ›

Our groundbreaking case against Shell's Board of Directors comes to an end. In February 2023, we filed a case against Shell's Board of Directors for failing to move away from fossil fuels fast enough. This is the first ever case of its kind seeking to hold corporate directors personally liable.

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