Characteristics of successful environmental courts and tribunals (“ECTs”) by The Hon. Justice...

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Characteristics of successful environmental courts and tribunals (“ECTs”) by The Hon. Justice Brian J Preston SC Chief Judge, Land and Environment Court of NSW

Transcript of Characteristics of successful environmental courts and tribunals (“ECTs”) by The Hon. Justice...

Characteristics of successful environmental courts and

tribunals (“ECTs”)

by

The Hon. Justice Brian J Preston SC

Chief Judge, Land and Environment Court of NSW

Introduction

• Exponential growth in ECTs – over 350 of these specialised fora now exist in many countries and regions of the world

• Can be a separate Environment Court or Environment Tribunal (“green court”)

• Can be an Environmental Division of traditional court (“green bench”)

• Can be designated environmental judges (“green judges”)

Purpose of presentation

• Identify 12 key characteristics that are required for an ECT to operate successfully in practice

• Draw upon examples from many jurisdictions around the world, especially throughout Australia and New Zealand

• In the process, identify best practices from these jurisdictions in order to assist those countries which are establishing a new ECT or wish to improve the operation of an existing ECT.

1. Status and authority• More successful ECTs:

enjoy a more comprehensive jurisdiction; are recognised by governments, stakeholders and the

wider community alike as the appropriate and legitimate forum for resolving disputes;

have judges and members who are environmentally literate;

develop environmental jurisprudence and serve a value-adding function.

examples from NSW, New Zealand, Sweden, Brazil; less successful examples from Trinidad & Tobago and Bangladesh.

2. Independent from government and impartial

• Need for formal independence from legislative and executive branches of government, as well as other external influences (e.g. media and pressure groups)

• Decision-makers must be impartial• Independence and impartiality may be enabled by

institutional arrangements and rules relating to selection of judges, tenure for judges and so on

• Problem of “captive tribunals”• Interesting examples from Brazil, the United States and

Austria.

3. Comprehensive and centralised jurisdiction

• An ECT should enjoy comprehensive jurisdiction to hear, determine and dispose of various types of matters and disputes arising under environmental laws

• Comprehensive and integrated jurisdiction: administrative, civil and criminal proceedings

• The environmental laws themselves must have adequate subject matter coverage, be effective and be enforceable

• Interesting examples from Ireland, Kenya, China and Canada

4. Judges and members are knowledgeable and competent

• Members should ideally be environmentally literate prior to appointment

• Continuing professional development

• Use of technical experts• Interesting examples from

Sweden, NSW, and other Australian jurisdictions.

5. Operates as a multi-door courthouse

• Successful ECTs should: offer alternative dispute resolution (e.g.

mediation and conciliation) Adopt and use a formal screening and intake

process to determine most appropriate environmental dispute resolution mechanism

Interesting examples from NSW, Queensland and New Zealand

The multi-door courthouse

6. Provides access to scientific and technical expertise

• Provision of internal and external scientific and technical expertise

• Procedures to reduce adversarial bias in external experts of parties – e.g. court appointed and parties’ single experts; concurrent evidence.

• Problem-solving approach rather than conflict-based courtroom “battle of the experts”

• Interesting examples from NSW and Queensland

7. Facilitates access to justice

• Substantive decisions of ECT can uphold fundamental constitutional, statutory and human rights of access to justice – e.g. access to information and rights of public participation.

• ECT can adopt innovative practices and procedures to facilitate access to justice – e.g. liberally construing standing requirements and relaxing rules on costs.

• Other access initiatives ECTs should adopt – e.g. geographical accessibility and innovative use of technology.

• Interesting example of Land and Environment Court of NSW• Non-specialist or generalist courts can also facilitate access to

environmental justice – e.g. Supreme Court of the Philippines: Oposa v Factoran 33 ILM 173 (1994).

8. Achieves just, quick and cheap resolution of disputes

• Allocation of matters to ECTs – specialised bodies are better positioned to move more quickly and effectively through environmental cases

• ECTs must have effective case management procedures

• Need to deal promptly with interlocutory applications and rebut attempts to adjourn or delay the final hearing and disposal of the proceedings.

• Interesting examples from NSW, Queensland and Western Australia

9. Responsive to environmental problems and relevant

• Successful ECTs are better able to address the pressing, pervasive, and pernicious environmental problems that confront society (such as climate change and loss of biodiversity)

• Example: Climate change litigation in the Land and Environment Court of NSW

• Restorative justice as an approach to sentencing for environmental crime

10. Develops environmental jurisprudence

• Example of Land and Environment Court of NSW – development of jurisprudence on principles of ecologically sustainable development through logical progression of law by way of analogy.

• Development of environmental jurisprudence by specialised ECTs may also facilitate cross fertilisation of environmental law whereby domestic ECTs draw upon the environmental jurisprudence of other countries – example of Telstra Corporation Ltd v Hornsby Shire Council (2006) 146 LGERA 10

11. Underlying ethos and mission

• Many of the ECTs located throughout the world that have enjoyed greater success have a clear sense of direction with respect to the role they play in the broader schema of environmental governance.

• Examples of statement of purpose for ECTs from NSW and Tasmania.

12. Flexible, innovative and provides value-adding function

• An ECT’s decisions and work can generate value apart from the particular case or task involved

• An ECT may add value by: Developing environmental jurisprudence; Formulating and applying non-binding principles or

guidelines for merits review cases – e.g. Planning Principles of the Land and Environment Court of NSW

Innovations in practice and procedure – e.g. implementation of the International Framework for Court Excellence and development of JIRS environmental crime sentencing database by Land and Environment Court of NSW

Conclusion

• Identified 12 characteristics that are required for an ECT to operate successfully.

• These best practices will be useful to those countries that currently do not have an ECT

• Even for those ECTs that have enjoyed much success and already display many, if not all, of the characteristics identified, there is still much work to be done.

• All ECTs should, in the spirit of an adaptive management approach, continually monitor, review and adjust their operations in the pursuit of excellence.