There are also a number of other advantages to pursuing the ICC route.
Firstly, it adds a new “ground rule” to an existing system – a rule to prevent serious harm to nature – that applies across many jurisdictions. This is important as the worst polluters are often transnational corporations.
Secondly, the adoption process will take some time (not as long as creating an entirely new treaty but nonetheless a period of years) and a lot of support. This entails a period where the law is not yet in place but can be seen gathering momentum – approaching over the horizon, so to speak, provoking positive behavioural change in anticipation of its arrival. Indeed it is already beginning to do so, as we can see from the response of the investment community, for example.
Thirdly and potentially most powerfully, it is a strategic legal intervention that helps to create a shift in mindset – one could describe it as a new moral taboo. We all know you can’t apply to a government to kill people for your new business – it wouldn’t even cross our minds to do so – but we don’t yet recoil in the same healthy way from destroying the natural world. Criminalising serious harm to nature at the highest level provides a strong moral foundation for that, by creating individual criminal responsibility for key decision makers at the highest level.
Moreover, as ecocidal activities often take place in the global south or in poorer communities, while the key decisions are taken in the wealthy north, this law presents a useful tool for addressing climate justice, and also acts as a strong complement to the newly acknowledged human right to a clean and healthy environment. Our right to life is protected by the fact that to take that life is a crime. In the same way, the right of communities to a healthy environment will be protected by the fact that serious damage to that environment will become criminal.
And once the law is in place, prosecutions will be able to be taken in any ratifying jurisdiction, not just in the Hague, so the breadth of possibilities for prosecution is considerably greater than might be assumed at first glance.
This criminal law route can therefore provide an enforceable deterrent to underpin and support UNFCCC agreements (Paris, Glasgow). Indeed, while ecocide was not on the official agenda at COP26 it was a word and theme that cropped up repeatedly across Glasgow last month, both inside and outside the official conference. As we can clearly see from the lukewarm results of COP26, goodwill and ambition are simply not enough to shift humanity back into a safe operating space. Ecocide law offers a new parameter that enables governments and corporations to go beyond efforts to just play the same game better. It enables them to start playing it differently.