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IISD President David Runnalls and trade and environment law expert Howard Mann are available for interviews. Please call 416-538-8712 to schedule a time.
For the first time, the governments of Canada and the United States have formally supported the right of an environmental non-governmental organization-the International Institute for Sustainable Development-to intervene in a major trade law case. If successful, the Canadian-based Institute will be the first NGO ever to intervene in the so far secretive but environmentally critical NAFTA Chapter 11 proceedings.
In documents submitted on November 10 to the NAFTA Tribunal hearing the case of Methanex vs. the United States, Canada supported IISD's August 26 petition to present an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief. The U.S. government also formally supported IISD's petition, and that of a U.S.-based NGO, EarthJustice.
The arbitration Tribunal, convened under the rules of NAFTA and the United Nations Centre for International Trade Law, is expected to render a final decision later this month.
IISD wants to intervene for two reasons:
Due to the Tribunal's confidentiality provisions, the Canadian government documents supporting IISD, submitted November 10, are still not available to the public.
NAFTA's Chapter 11, designed to protect foreign investors from expropriation and other unfair treatment, has been invoked against environmental regulations in several recent cases:
Said IISD President David Runnalls: "We are delighted that the government of Canada has taken this unprecedented stand to support our petition for a voice at the Tribunal. It shows that they appreciate both the critical environmental importance of this case, and the urgent need to pry open the closed doors of NAFTA's Chapter 11."