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HH8: LAW & HYDRO-HEGEMONY King’s College London, 24-25 October 2015. The Making of International Water Law: Evolving Patterns of International Norm Creation Prof Owen McIntyre School of Law University College Cork National University of Ireland. Overview.
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HH8: LAW & HYDRO-HEGEMONYKing’s College London, 24-25 October 2015 The Making of International Water Law: Evolving Patterns of International Norm Creation Prof Owen McIntyre School of Law University College Cork National University of Ireland
Overview • Classical Sources of International Law • Unique Challenges of International Water Law • Complexity, urgency, global, issue boundaries, compliance • Classical Sources of International Law – reconsidered? • Treaties; Custom; Gen Principles; Judicial & Arb Tribunals; Publicists • Innovative Law-making - Beyond Art. 38(1)? • “Soft-Law” Instruments • Technical Complexity: Specialist (law-making) institutions • Multi-Level Governance: transnational regulation; GAL • Procedural Sophistication: inter-State engagement; participative HRs • Fragmentation vs. Integration? • ‘Effectiveness’ of Intl Water Law: (Bodansky; Louka) • Design: appropriate measures; achievable targets; affordable • Implementation: compliance; domestic incorporation;
Sources of International Law: Article 38(1) ICJ Statute • Conventions / Treaties / Agreements • 1997 UN Watercourses Convention; 1992 UNECE Water Convention; 2000 SADC Revised Protocol; Boundary Waters Treaty; ZAMCOM Agreement • Customary International Law: • State Practice: ERU, Prevention, Notification, Co-op • Opinio Juris: • Soft Law: Declarations (Rio), Principles /Codes of Conduct; Recommendations; Codifications • 1966 ILA Helsinki Rules • Secondary Sources: Judicial Opinions, Publicists, General Principles (Equity)
Rel. btn Sources of Intl. Law • Custom • Convention • Soft Law • Custom (Opinio Juris) • Conventions • Custom (Practice)
Theories of Compliance • 1st Party Compliance: voluntary unilateral compliance, political pressure from NGOs, opposition, coalition partners; reciprocity / self-interest • 2nd Party Compliance: bilateral / regional, ‘negotiating in the shadow of the law’ • 3rd Party Compliance: compliance mechanisms, independent dispute settlement, arbitration, judicial fora.
Challenges of Intl. Water Law • Recent rapid development (1970 - 2000) • Not distinct or systematically constructed • Classical sources of international law • Scope and boundaries unclear • Overlaps with intl. human rights law, natural resources law, intl. investment law, intl. trade law • Urgency: inclusive, comprehensive, technical • Framework agreements, principles, institutions • Tech. complexity: dynamic, general principles • Compliance, Enforcement, Dispute-settlement
Classical Sources • Proliferation of bodies: IGOs, NGOs, judicial, technical, etc. elaborate rules • UNEP, MDBs (OP7.50), RBOs, GWP, IHA • Iron Rhine Arbitration, PCA 2005: • ‘considerable debate as to what constitutes “rules” or “principles”; what is “soft law”; and which environmental treaty law or principles have contributed to development of custom’ • However, Art 38(1) remains the only authoritative statement of sources
Classical Sources: Treaties • Highly technical regimes; ˃ 400 treaties - ‘law-making treaties’: gen conduct rules • Non-water treaties: GATT, Art XX(b)&(g); UNCLOS; CBD, UNCCD; Ramsar; etc. • Framework Conventions: key principles, substantive objectives, inst. mechanisms • 1992 UNECE Water Convention; Protocols • 1997 UN Watercourses Convention • 2000 SADC Revised Protocol • 2008 ILC Draft Articles on TB Aquifers
Classical Sources: Treaties • Advantages of “Framework” Approach • Institutionalised co-op: UNECE MoP; WGWH; • Collective means of ensuring compliance: • Allows for technical evolution of regime / flexibility: (Framework Agreement / Protocol / Annex) • Specialist institutional structures: law-making • 1969 VCLT, e.g. Art. 31(3)(c), evolutionary interpretation / systemic integration; Art. 18, respect agreements not yet in force; etc. • Broad participation: consensus negotiation; “package deal” diplomacy; fixed baseline calculation / no trade benefit (1985 Vienna Convention)
Classical Sources: Treaties • Advantages of “Framework” Approach • Broad participation: use of reservations restricted – general structures & guidelines; delicate compromises (but use of “interpretive declarations”) • CBD (190 parties); CITES (171 parties); Basel Convention (170 parties); Vienna Convention (191 parties, Montréal Protocol has 191 parties, London Amendment 185 parties); FCCC (191 parties, the Kyoto Protocol has 173 parties); UNCCD (191 parties); Ramsar Convention (154 parties); UNCLOS (153 parties); MARPOL 73/78 (143 parties to Annex I/II, totaling 97.98 per cent of world shipping tonnage)
Classical Sources: Custom • No treaty, incomplete coverage, vague treaty provisions • Applies generally to all States (persistent objectors, while status of rule is in doubt) • Relatively new field, limited State practice • Reasonably flexible / relaxed approach – significance of seminal instruments: 1966 Helsinki Rules; 1972 Stockholm / 1992 Rio Declaration;
Classical Sources: Custom • ERU (incl. env / eco protection) • Duty of prevention / “no-harm” principle • Linked to sic utere tuo maxim; abuse of rights (abus de droit; rechtsmissbrauch); good neighbourliness (droit international de voisinage; nachbarrecht); territorial sovereignty / sovereign equality • Pulp Mills case (2010): “no-harm” a well-spring of many other rules of IEL, e.g. EIA • Obligation to cooperate re nat. resources
Classical Sources: Custom • Conservation of endangered species of flora and fauna • Duty to protect marine environment • Guiding Principles: precaution, inter-gen equity, polluter pays principle, common but differentiated responsibility, etc. • Procedural Rules (Cooperation): duty to notify, consult, negotiate, transboundary environmental impact assessment (EIA)
Classical Sources: Custom • Regional custom: regional needs and capacities; different rates of progress (e.g. IWL highly developed in S. Africa) • Relationship btn. convention & custom: mutual interdependence, ‘fertilization and mutual pollination’; North Sea Continental Shelf cases (1969).
Classical Sources: General Principles • Universal principles of national law: • Marginal: elements of legal reasoning & private law analogies (equity v. important) • Guiding principles of intl. env. law?: • Beyerlin: ‘twilight norms at bottom of normative hierarchy’; ‘grey area between hard and soft law’; • Sustainable development: Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros case (1997)
Classical Sources: General Principles • Equity: ‘considerations of fairness, reasonableness necessary for sensible application of more settled rules of law’ • River Meuse case (1936), Judge Hudson • International Environmental Law (generally): • Equitable and Reasonable Utilisation: UNWC Art 5 • 1978 UNEP Draft Principles on Shared Nat. Res. • ILC 2001 DA 9&10 Prevention of TB Harm from HA • Sus Dev: inter/intra-generational equity (Rio Pr. 3) • Arts. 3(1) & 4(2)(a) UNFCCC; Arts. 1 & 15(7) CBD • 1974 Fisheries Jurisdiction (UK v Iceland) case
Classical Sources: Judicial & Arbitral Tribunals • No doctrine of binding precedent, authoritative statement of state / status / application of law; ‘normative accretion’ • Lac Lanous Arbitration [1957]: cooperation • Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Case [1997]: sust. dev. • Pulp Mills Case (2010): transboundary EIA • Kishenganga Arbitration (2013): env flows • May only elaborate on legal principles applicable – Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros case • ICJ; PCA; ad hoc arbitration; HR Courts; ICSID; NAFTA tribunals; WTO DSB/AB
Classical Sources: Publicists • Impact of individual scholars difficult to quantify • Berber; Bourne Camponera; McCaffrey; Teclaff; etc. • Learned Associations: • Institut de Droit International (IDI) • International Law Institute (ILA) • 1966 Helsinki Rules • Intl Law Comm. Codifications (Chair/Sources) • 1994 Draft Arts. on the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses • 2008 Draft Arts on TB Aquifers • 2001 Draft Arts on the Responsibility of States
Law-Making beyond Art. 38(1): “Soft-Law” Instruments • Numerous non-binding principles, rules and standards - “declarative law”: vol. compliance; bi/multilateral negotiations; Rio (Bodansky) • Influencing State practice, generating custom, intl. standards / due diligence, interpreting “hard law” norms (Dupuy) • Solidifying indicators for documentation of opinio juris (Hohmann) • South West Africa Case (Second Phase)(1966) Judge Tanaka: ‘middle way btn. convention and traditional process of custom generation’
Law-Making beyond Art. 38(1):Complexity / Tech. Institutions • UNEP; ILC; UNECE; FAO; WHO; GWP; etc. • WTO / TEC; RBOs (environmental mandate & scientific / technical competence); etc. • Scientific complexity – ‘permanent dialogue’: IPCC; IPBES; etc. – ‘focal points of a broad, legally significant communication process’ • Decision-makers require scientifically credible and independent information re complex relationships between biodiversity, ecosystems services and people (IPBES)
Law-Making beyond Art. 38(1):Multi-Level Governance • Law of co-existence → co-operation • Bilateral → regional → global rules: env / nat res law leading ‘communitarization’ of intl law • Prolific nature of env law, ‘using all normative means’, non-traditional actors, ‘global administrative law’; transnational regulation: • e.g. ISO 26000; industry self-regulation; hybrid private-private / public-private reg; network governance; regulatory IGOs/MDBs • ‘Good governance’ values: legality, rationality, proportionality, transparency/participation, HRs
Law-Making beyond Art. 38(1):Procedural Sophistication • Participative approach informed by Human Rts: affected persons access info, participate in decision-making, access legal recourse • Ogoni case (2001), ACHR read Art. 24 ACHPR to include broad participative rights, incl. ESIA • Awas Tingni Mayagna (Sumo) case (2001), IACHR read Art. 21 ACHR to incl. indigenous participation • Guerra & Others v. Italy (1998), ECHR, read Art. 8 to incl. duty to impart info re risks of major accidents • MDB / IFI Environmental & Social Safeguard Policies (EBRD: EU/UNECE Legal Standards)
Law-Making beyond Art. 38(1):Fragmentation v. Integration • Specialised & autonomous spheres of rules and institutions; treaty congestion; overlapping regimes; risk of inconsistency • Env law ‘pervasive’, penetrating other spheres: WTO/GATT; Human Rights (right to home / life / physical integrity / health / standard of living) • Art. 31(3)(c) VCLT – ‘systemic integration’: • Iron Rhine Arbitration (2005) PCA • Indus Waters Kishenganga Arbitration (2013) PCA