UK: EIRIS report highlights indigenous wrongs

EIRIS and CAER has just released a joint report exploring the challenges and opportunities faced by companies operating in areas where the rights of indigenous peoples are threatened

di Staff

Ethical Investment Research Services (EIRIS) and the Centre for Australian Ethical Research (CAER) has just released Indigenous rights, indigenous wrongs: risks for resource sectors – a joint report exploring the challenges and opportunities faced by companies operating in areas where the rights of indigenous peoples are threatened. The report also analyses the measures companies are implementing to address indigenous and land rights issues.

Globally, there are estimated to be up to 500 million indigenous peoples in more than 70 countries around the world representing over 5,000 languages and cultures on every continent. Companies engaging in activities that may infringe the rights of indigenous peoples, as enshrined within the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, face increasing reputational risks potentially leading to issues around access to capital, damage to brand, licence to operate, and operational risks such as the threat of litigation and increased regulation.

Companies not doing enough to protect rights of indigenous peoples
The report examines the policies and strategies adopted by seven large companies1 operating in a range of countries and resource sectors for whom the issue of indigenous rights to land and sea is identified by EIRIS to be a potential business risk: Anglo-Eastern Plantations, Barrick Gold, BHP Billiton, Suncor Energy, Total, Weyerhaeuser, and Woodside Petroleum.

The report finds that whilst some companies are addressing indigenous rights issues, none of the companies researched are going far enough:
? most companies examined demonstrate a basic public commitment to indigenous rights and a commitment to meaningful consultation
? of the high risk sectors analysed, extractive industries such as oil and gas and mining are most likely to demonstrate a response; sectors such as forestry and agriculture lag behind in their response
? few companies are clearly committed to achieving free, prior and informed consent2 (without manipulation of coercion) for all projects or are effectively managing the engagement and consent process
? the quality of reporting on indigenous rights issues is generally poor, with most companies providing a response to any allegations of breaches of indigenous rights but few reporting voluntarily on areas of non-compliance

?Given the level of NGO and media attention to the issue of indigenous peoples? rights and the introduction of more rigorous laws and regulations in many countries, those companies with strong commitments and effective engagement processes will undoubtedly benefit in an environment where access to land and resources is becoming increasingly difficult? said Stephanie Maier, Head of Research at EIRIS. ?Indigenous rights are a human rights issue that both companies and their investors are waking up to? she continued.

Christal George, Corporate Ethics Researcher at CAER said: ?The recent adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples by 143 countries as members of UN General Assembly, sends a clear signal that as international standards evolve companies will increasingly be brought into the spotlight and their actions scrutinised. Companies which are committed to achieving free, prior and informed consent for all their projects are not only best placed to mitigate risk but also able to benefit from indigenous knowledge and expertise?.

Ethical Investment Research Services (EIRIS), established in 1983, provides independent research into corporate social, environmental and ethical performance. This article has been published with their permission.

More info:
www.eiris.org


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