Platform
holds Annual General Meeting in Brussels
Brussels, 15 July
2014 – The NGO Shipbreaking Platform, a global coalition of environmental,
human rights and labour rights organisations dedicated to safe, clean and just
ship recycling, organised a debate on “Environmental (in)justice and the role
of European companies” on 9 July in Brussels. The event was hosted by the
European Asian Institute Studies and co-organised with the European
Environmental Bureau/EJOLT and the European Coalition for Corporate Justice
(ECCJ). Jim Puckett, Executive Director of the US-based Basel Action Network,
chaired the event, which was attended by EU and UN policy makers,
representatives of the diplomatic corps of Pakistan, Bangladesh and EU Member
States, NGO campaigners, business associations and experts from the ship recycling
industry.
The event started
with Nick Meynen, from the Global Policies and Sustainability Unit at EEB, who
presented EJOLT’s environmental injustice map, which was launched earlier this
year. Nick Meynen called on everyone interested in exposing environmental
injustice cases to contact EJOLT and to add further information to the map.
Rizwana Hasan,
Chief Executive from the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association (BELA)
and board member of the Platform, explained that companies based outside her
country, including European ship owners and banks, that choose to send their
toxic end-of-life vessels to the beaches of South Asia in order to maximise
their profits, share a major part of the responsibility of the shipbreaking
crisis. She emphasised that European governments claim that they do not have
the capacity to deal with the recycling of their old ships, but expect
developing countries to do it for them.
Ritwick Dutta,
lawyer at New Delhi-based Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment (LIFE)
and board member of the Platform, summarised several prominent cases of large
mining projects in India that met strong resistance from the local population
and were eventually abandoned.
Jérôme Chaplier,
coordinator of the ECCJ, gave insight about current discussions at the EU level
on how to hold companies accountable, for example by demanding they disclose
information about their investments and their social and environmental
implications. However, European policies to ensure transnational companies are
held accountable, are still in their infancy. Further regulation is needed to
address human rights violations, exploitation and environmental degradation
caused or accepted when companies invest or produce goods abroad.
Ingvild Jenssen,
policy advisor at the Platform, summarised the latest developments on the EU
level regarding the EU Ship Recycling Regulation and stressed that the
regulation will only be able to live up to its promise to hold European ship
owners accountable for their unsustainable shipbreaking practices if the EU
decides to introduce an economic incentive that would help ensure cleaner and
safer ship recycling by making re-flagging to flags of convenience less
attractive for ship owners.
The event took
place while the NGO Shipbreaking Platform’s 19 member organisations (including
the secretariat based in Brussels) were convening in Brussels for their annual
general meeting, during which they discussed their campaigns in South Asia and
in the EU.
Source: shipbreaking
platform
http://www.shipbreakingplatform.org/platform-news-ngo-shipbreaking-platform-presents-annual-report-2013/
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