Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the invitation. It's a pleasure to address your committee from Santiago, Chile, and from your embassy, in fact. They have quite good facilities here. I appreciate that.
I'm part of the UN working group on business and human rights. We have the mandate to push the implementation of the UN guiding principles on business and human rights, unanimously endorsed by the Human Rights Council in 2011. We are five independent experts from different regions of the world. I am the Latin American and Caribbean person, let's say, in this group.
Part of the work we do is to make sure that the GPs, the guiding principles, are embedded in the global governance. One of the very good success stories that we have is the embedment of the guiding principles and their rationale into all OECD streams of work, including responsible business conduct in general in the OECD guidelines for multinational corporations, and including, in 2011, an updated version including human rights, fully aligned with the guiding principles.
From there on, we have been working very much hand in hand and actually co-chairing the annual round table on policy coherence that takes place in Paris, but we're also working in different regions of the world collaboratively and very actively. That's one good thing I can say.
The other thing we try to do is to get the guiding principles into practice at the national level, through national action plans on business and human rights. There's a policy framework that can look quite different from one country to another, but it's basically going into principle number two, which is that governments should set expectations for companies operating in their territory or for their own companies operating abroad. This is something we're pushing. We're trying to make it happen in reality.
Right now, there are 17 national action plans published, mostly in the north—mostly European, plus the U.S.—but there is some pickup and there are some good developments taking place in Asia, in Latin America a little bit, and in Africa in Kenya, Mozambique, and a few others, for the time being.
Then, in terms of getting into the real companies, we try to work with business associations. In the mining sector and the extractive sector, IPIECA and ICMM are good partners with us. We try to make sure that we are speaking the same language, pushing or developing the same narrative, and setting expectations that are compatible, and hopefully, fully aligned with international norms of behaviour.
One of the problems when we don't speak the same language or we don't use the same principles is that things get confusing on the operational side, and that is the perfect excuse for inaction. In order to push implementation of the international norms of behaviour regarding responsible business conduct in general or in particular in terms of business and human rights, we need to speak the same language. We need to harmonize and to develop public policy that is coherent and therefore implementable, not only at the headquarters level of a company, let's say, such as Canadian companies in Canada, but also where Canadians operate abroad. We need to have consistency there in order to concentrate all our efforts on implementation and not on the philosophical discussion or the “why do we need to do this?”, etc., which is, as I said before, the perfect excuse for inaction.
One means of our work is to carry out country visits. I am from Chile. I have been working in this area of responsible business conduct for the last 17 years, so I know my region, and in particular, 14 countries have done quite well. In the last two years, we have conducted three country visits—three missions that were quite intense—to Brazil, Peru, and Mexico, plus a visit to Canada that ended on June 1. There is a preliminary report that is available for you on our website in three languages so far—English and French, but also in Spanish right now, I believe.
You can look at that. It has a very strong component on the extractive industry. Some of the findings are that, despite the guiding principles of business and human rights becoming part of the language and the conversation that my colleagues, my group, have had with the stock exchange, the extractive industry associations, and regulators of the CSR agenda of Canada and the NCP, so far, the guiding principles are referenced but there is not a clear indication of implementation.
When we ask about evidence of progress in terms of implementation, it is rather weak but much better than in other countries we have engaged with, because then there is not even a reference. In this case, there is a growing understanding of human rights impacts and risks, but it's still far from being good enough, including inside Canada. That was one of the findings—that there are differences in implementation inside Canada, much less outside Canada.
We see there great room and opportunity for improvement, because you already have good platforms at the industry level, at the stock exchange level, at the NCP level, and in the Global Affairs actions you have and the monitoring of CSR. All of that exists as platforms, but what we found was that there is room for much better policy coherence, clearer reference in terms of expectations, and much better monitoring at the international level, including using your leverage.
Being the number one investor in mining in my Latin American region, and having a region with a lot of difficulties and problems of all kinds, of course we also saw room for you collectively, as Canada—private sector, stock exchange, government, and your different agencies—to work more collaboratively with the host countries of your investments to improve the environment for mining investment and the extractive industry in general.
What we found from the three country visits, plus my personal experience.... Those country visits are also reported. They are public. Two of them are final reports. One is preliminary, on Peru. What we saw was a lot of illegal mining, corruption, and criminalization of human rights defenders, including union leaders, and weak engagement on intercultural factors. I am talking about the extractive industry in general, not only Canadian investors but the industry overall.
We saw, sadly, significant capture of the state by private sector and big investment. At the national level, we saw a fierce competition between the economic side of government, which seems to be quite short term, expressing urgency for attracting investments, collecting some taxes, and creating jobs, putting in a very secondary position social and environmental impacts and safeguards regarding those elements.
One thing that also popped up was the disconnection between human rights and economic development. It's almost like a mindset disconnection. We know, as the SDGs have pointed out, that there is no sustainable development without responsible business conduct, and responsible business conduct embeds respect for human rights, but that narrative is very clearly disconnected, so far, from the economic side of government vis-à-vis the social and environmental side of government. In fact, they act like two separate entities, the first one being the most powerful one, and the second, the weaker one. Therefore, there is a disbalance at the national level.
To end, we see room for significant and better collaboration. We are building platforms in different regions of the world, including the Americas. We are using the economic commissions of the UN in the case of Latin America and the Caribbean, but Canada and the U.S. have been invited to that. It's a race-to-the-top approach, peer learning, and an exercise of multi-stakeholder accountability, to look at what we can do in order to improve the cycle of investments and the rationale of investment, and make it more balanced with safeguards regarding human rights.
Finally, we have also set expectations of the role of industry associations and governments to set expectations very clearly to their members, to monitor implementation, to learn from practice, to improve the implementation, and to use their leverage at the Latin American level to partner with a local membership or peer organization, but also with the government, basically to strengthen the capacity of the authorities and the different stakeholders to play a positive role regarding investments, and not what we have today, which is disconnection in many aspects, and on top of that, what I already mentioned about corruption, corporate capture, and significant incapacity by the government to deliver on the most basic commitments and obligations.
I will leave it there for now.
Thank you very much.