The article was just published in the Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly and can be accessed here.
Thursday, 5 June 2014
Should Environmental Activists Be Considered Pirates?
The article was just published in the Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly and can be accessed here.
Monday, 25 March 2013
Finality Confirmed, Constitutionality Upheld: Major Victory for International Arbitration Community in Australia
This is my latest article co-authored with Matthew Lee, published on the Kluwer Arbitration Blog.
Here's a sneak peak:
Last Wednesday, the international arbitration community in Australia won a significant victory. Indeed, in TCL Air Conditioner (Zhongshan) Co Ltd v The Judges of the Federal Court of Australia [2013] HCA 5 (13 March 2013), S178/2012, the Australian High Court (“Court”) dismissed a challenge to the constitutionality of the International Arbitration Act 1974 (Cth) (“the Act”), and thus confirmed Australia’s appeal as a hub of international arbitration in the Asia-Pacific. The decision has important implications not only because it confirms the finality of international arbitral awards, but also because it clarifies the demarcation between judicial power and arbitral authority under Australian law. As we argue in this post, this is a welcome move, particularly in light of the Australian Government’s resolution to no longer include investor-state dispute settlement provisions in BITs and FTAs, a decision which sent shockwaves throughout the international arbitration community and placed a question mark on Australia’s commitment to its growing international arbitration industry.
Read the entire article on the Kluwer Arbitration Blog here:
http://kluwerarbitrationblog.com/blog/2013/03/19/finality-confirmed-constitutionality-upheld-major-victory-for-international-arbitration-community-in-australia/
Monday, 17 September 2012
Why lawyers make better Presidents
Friday, 14 September 2012
When Clean Energy Is Not Enough
And that is essentially what a federal court in Brazil avoided last week when it suspended the construction of potentially the world's third largest hydroelectric dam (the "Bel Monte dam") for failure to consult with indigenous communities in the Amazon region. The federal court's decision stated that the Brazilian Congress acted illegally in giving the green light for the project without consulting with indigenous tribes living in the area. As this renders the project's environmental license invalid, the consortium conducting the project is liable to a daily fine of 500,000 Brazilian reais (US$247,500) if construction continues.
Brazil has one of the world's most diversified energy matrices. According to Brazilian government data, 45.3% of its energy is generated from renewable sources, such as water, biomass, ethanol, wind and solar sources. Hydroelectric power plants, such as the would-be Bel Monte dam, generate over 75% of the electricity used in Brazil. As the Amazon region depends heavily on fossil fuels for energy, the Brazilian government is adamant on pressing ahead with the Bel Monte project to make the region more self-sufficient.
Brazil is also home to almost half a million indigenous people, whose ancestors pre-date Brazil's European discovery by the Portuguese in 1500. If construction of the dam goes ahead, approximately 500 square kilometers of land along the Xingu River in the Amazon would be flooded. According to official government estimates, this would displace some 16,000 people, with environmentalists putting the number much higher at 40,000. The project may also adversely affect large areas of the rainforest and fish stocks upon which indigenous people depend on.
In his ruling, the judge noted the consortium's failure to follow an international law known as the International Labor Organization Convention No. 169 ("the ILO Convention"), ratified by Brazil in 2002, which demands consultations of tribal and indigenous people, before work can commence in areas that may affect them. The Convention seeks to protect tribal peoples' right to, amongst other things, own the land they live on and to make decisions about projects that may ultimately have an adverse impact on their lives.
The court's decision comes as a surprise given that Brazil's Solicitor-General recently signed a directive that opens up all indigenous lands to mineral, dams, roads, military bases and other developments of "national interest' without the need to consult with or address concerns of indigenous people. Not only is the directive in clear violation of the ILO Convention, but it has also been described as "unconstitutional" by Brazil's Public Prosecutor's Office.
Ultimately, the court's decision may do little to prevent the construction of the Bel Monte dam. The consortium may appeal and win. Alternatively, the Brazilian Congress may expedite consultations with indigenous tribes to satisfy procedural requirements. The decision highlights inherent tensions in environmental policies that seek to promote clean energy to sustain economic growth on one hand, and sustainable development on the other. Decision-makers are caught in the middle by having to engage in a balancing act that may not always produce the best results, nor protect the most valuable interests.
"The fundamental question that Brazilians must re-examine is not merely how to balance different stakeholder interests, but how do we deal with our growing energy consumption" says Kamila Guimaraes De Moraes, a Brazilian environmental lawyer and Capes Foundation researcher at The Federal University of Santa Catarina in Brazil.
The development of clean forms of energy is a worthwhile pursuit as the world struggles to tame global warming. But it may not have the impact we so eagerly anticipate if it is not accompanied by a more fundamental -- cultural -- change. That is, recalibrating our hunger for energy writ-large. Any other solution is likely to merely treat the symptoms of a problem that can arguably only be resolved by an etiological solution. Says Ms. Guimaraes: "We must therefore reassess our way of life."
Originally published on OpEdNews http://www.opednews.com/articles/When-Clean-Energy-Is-Not-E-by-Lucas-Bento-120827-911.html
Sunday, 29 April 2012
The Banker Beggar's Loss
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
A life of Capital Letters
Which expired in the end,
An illusion? A trick? A mirage?
A broken toy which you cannot mend.
A sentence starts with a Capital letter
A big, majestic imposter!
Full of character!
But ends timidly,
Lonely,
With a full stop;
Perhaps still (a) character?
But unworthy of a letter.
Live life like an open,
Open-ended sentence
No full stops.
Live big,
Majestically,
Live life like a Capital Letter.
Thursday, 23 June 2011
A Plastic Life
He focuses on the plastic.
Looking down at it, focused.
His voice disintegrates into textual ashes.
The world fades away, sober.
His fingertips extend virtual touches,
But fail to capture the soul’s thunder.
Yet he focuses on this plastic.
Like magic.
Looking down at it, hypnotized.
Looking sideways he dares not,
For his life lives in this gadget.
Connected to all,
Yet disconnected from life.
He lives on the plastic.
Reaching out for it, excited!
The mastery of the swipe!
Enslaves his soul to his skill,
Leading him to confound
Fantasy with what’s real.
He owns the thing, yes,
But fails to feel
The warm pleasure of joining a family’s evening meal.
His soul becomes plastic.
A hard processed thing; a lifeless fiction,
With no desires, no Life!
i.e. no dialectical contradictions,
With no fire, no spark!
Nothing
But for the plastic’s cancerous fruition.