Thank you.
Thank you very much for inviting me to appear before the committee.
I'm an associate professor of international law and international human rights law at the University of Ottawa. I also teach corporate law. I specialize in the human rights impacts of extraterritorial corporate activity. I've been engaged in investigation and research in this area for over a decade.
I was a member of the Harker mission that was sent to Sudan in 1999 to independently investigate and report on the alleged link between oil development and human rights violations, particularly the allegations of forced displacement around the oil fields and oil-related development where Talisman Energy, a Canadian company, was operating.
I want to address today three key arguments against the introduction of Bill C-300 that have been raised in testimony. The first argument is that the standards imposed in Bill C-300 are too high and will affect the global competitiveness of Canadian extractive companies. The second argument is that Canadian companies are going to have to relocate to other jurisdictions because of the impact these high standards will have on competitiveness.
The third argument I want to address is one that was raised in testimony by Mr. Dade, from FOCAL. It is that if we impose such high standards on Canadian companies that they will be forced to withdraw from certain projects, Chinese companies will take their place, and, in the end, because Canadian companies do such good corporate responsibility work, the local people will be worse off under the regime of the Chinese companies.
In terms of the first two arguments, we heard these types of arguments in the 1970s when the government began to introduce environmental regulations. These are now law, and businesses continue. We heard them when issues arose requiring consultation with aboriginal people before undertaking extractive activity on their traditional territories. The requirement of consultation and accommodation is now entrenched in our constitutional law, and it is also now a requirement under the new Ontario Mining Act. The extractive industry has continued to flourish. It has continued to be very profitable despite these regulatory developments.
The first argument is that the standards are too onerous in Bill C-300 and that Canadian companies will therefore suffer a debilitating competitive disadvantage if Bill C-300 is enacted. The bill requires Canadian companies to comply with the IFC performance standards, with the voluntary principles on security and human rights, and with human rights provisions that are to be determined. These provisions are to ensure that these companies operate in a manner that is consistent with international human rights standards.
Well, Canadian extractive companies already have to comply with the performance standards. The IFC and the OECD countries' export credit agencies, including Export Development Canada, claim they already apply the performance standards to those companies seeking financial support.
All major Canadian extractive companies are funded by financial institutions that subscribe to the Equator Principles, such as the Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, and Export Development Canada, and these institutions also claim to apply their performance standards to borrowers. The voluntary principles on security and human rights have been endorsed by the Canadian government and have also been adopted by major extractive companies, including Talisman Energy.
All companies that seek Export Development Canada's support will already be subject to human rights screening for the impacts of their project. EDC claims to take human rights into account in its decision on whether or not to fund a project.
In its “Taxation Issues for the Mining Industry: 2009 Update”, the Canadian Intergovernmental Working Group on the Mineral Industry stated, “Corporate social responsibility...activities are believed to be vital to ensure the competitiveness of industry”.
The other point that I'd like to make is that OPIC, one of the export credit agencies of our biggest trading partner, is now required by an amendment that was made to the Foreign Assistance Act in December 2009 to issue “a comprehensive set of environmental, transparency and internationally recognized worker rights and human rights guidelines with requirements binding on the Corporation and its investors”.
These standards are to be no less rigorous than the performance standards among others, so Bill C-300 is not such a great extension. This is happening in other places as well, and in particular in the U.S.
It's becoming a significant competitive disadvantage for Canadian companies not to comply with high environmental and human rights standards. You remember the issue of Pacific Rim in EI Salvador; El Salvador has recently banned all metal mining in the country because it is concerned about the environmental impacts of the gold industry and other industries on their water supply. Bill C-300 will help to redress this bad press. These standards are already being complied with, so there is no reason for these companies to be saying that they're too high.
The second argument is that the competitive disadvantage is so great that Canadian companies will have to move to other jurisdictions. Companies do relocate their headquarters, and corporations often make changes to their structures or use complex corporate structures to avoid domestic regulation, so will the enactment of Bill C-300 cause large numbers of Canadian extractive companies to move out of Canada? This is doubtful, and it's doubtful for a number of reasons.
The first point is that Canada is home to over 75% of the world's largest mining and exploration companies, and this is not just by chance. There are important reasons that mining and exploration companies are headquartered or otherwise present in Canada. Canada is resource-rich in oil, natural gas, potash, uranium, nickel, copper, gold, and diamonds and has some of the highest mineral exploration activity in the world within its own borders.
Mining in Canada is a lucrative business. The corporate operating profits in the Canadian mining industry were at $9.1 billion in 2008; that's double what they earned in 2007. Mining companies are able to raise billions of dollars on the Toronto and Vancouver stock exchanges. These two exchanges are the world's largest source of equity capital for mining companies undertaking exploration and development.
The Toronto Stock Exchange and the Toronto Stock Exchange Venture Exchange list 10 times more public mining companies than any other exchange in the world. In 2009, these two exchanges traded 79.1 billion mining shares and raised $22.2 billion in equity capital. Canada's insurance, banking, legal, and engineering industries have specialized groups that are tailored to providing, respectively, insurance, financing, legal advice, and technical mining support to mining corporations.
Other resource-rich countries such as Australia and China are actually considering introducing resource taxes. China wants to introduce a 5% tax on crude oil, coal, and natural gas sales, and Australia is introducing a “super profits tax” on windfall profits of resource companies. Other countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America have also considered windfall taxes and, in some cases, have actually implemented them.
Canada, on the other hand, has no such tax. On the contrary, Canada has a number of advantageous tax incentives to encourage investment in domestic mining. Flow-through shares, for example, allow investors to write off 100% of their exploration expenses being passed down, and the federal government's program of super flow-through shares gives an additional 15% tax credit for grassroots exploration.
As you can see, there are significant incentives for extractive companies to remain in Canada.
The final point I want to address is this argument that when Canadian companies pull out of countries, the Chinese will then fill the void and the people will be worse off.
In his testimony, Mr. Dade from FOCAL stated that it was a mistake to put pressure on Talisman to withdraw from Sudan and that Talisman had moved to address the human rights issue with a very rigorous and serious corporate social responsibility program. He said, “The investment is being controlled by the Chinese. The people in the communities are, if anything, worse off than they were before. This is a scenario that has a possibility of repeating itself throughout the hemisphere.” This is the argument of constructive engagement--better us than them.
First--I won't go into any detail, and I'm happy to answer questions on this--Talisman's self-regulation efforts in Sudan were very weak and deeply flawed. They claimed they had engaged the Government of Sudan and made progress on human rights issues, but there was no independent evidence to support this argument. In fact, the human rights situation deteriorated while Talisman was operating in Sudan.
The other point that's important is the distinction that needs to be made between corporate accountability and corporate social responsibility activities. Talisman claimed it was a force for the good, and this is misguided, okay? Its community development works, the hospitals, the schools, and the wells, those corporate social responsibility activities it was doing for the communities, were located in garrison towns. These were towns that were held by the government in rebel-controlled areas. They were not accessible to ordinary persons who were in or near the concessions and they contributed to the Government of Sudan's counter-insurgency strategy.
A company that claims to support human rights and to be guided by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights can't legitimately argue--at least out loud--that philanthropy can be an excuse for engaging in or being complicit in egregious violations of human rights. This is the point about the constructive engagement argument. Some situations exist where corporations can't be neutral actors, and no argument can be made that it's better to have a Canadian company there, being complicit in human rights violations, than to have another company. As a matter of good public policy, we need standards and an accountability mechanism.
I would like to address one more argument if I have time. This is the argument that Bill C-300, if it is enacted, will violate the sovereignty of developing states. As an expert in international law, I need to clarify this misunderstanding.
International law gives states extensive authority and capacity to regulate the conduct that takes place outside of their territory, that is, in the territory of other states. Canada may regulate the activity of its corporate nationals: any companies that are incorporated in Canada or headquartered in Canada.
In fact, Canada does already regulate the activities of its nationals extraterritorially in a variety of circumstances. It has done so in a number of circumstances: for instance, to implement treaty obligations, such as the convention against torture, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, and certain anti-terrorism laws.
But it has also extended its criminal jurisdiction where no treaty obligation was in place. So before the protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child came into place, Canada had already regulated the engagement of Canadian nationals abroad in sexual activities with children and in child prostitution. That had already happened.
In addition, common law civil liability also applies extraterritorially, so this is an absolute possibility under international law. Enacting this bill does not violate the sovereignty of developing states.
One final very short point is that the argument has been made in witness testimonies on Bill C-300 that the investigation mechanism will promote vexatious and spurious claims that companies will not be able to refute. Companies are already being tried in the court of public opinion, because there is no effective forum for assessing the validity of these claims. Companies need a credible and objective forum to promote dispute resolution and to help them to avoid and resolve conflict. Bill C-300, the mechanism that is proposed, could provide such a forum.
Thank you very much.