Title: The Precautionary Principle and the Burden of Proof
1The Precautionary Principle and the Burden of
Proof
- Naomi Oreskes
- ENVR 102
- Winter 2008
2Do we have to prove the benefit of nature?
- And if something has to be proved, who has the
burden of proof? - Those who want to protect nature from damage, or
those who dont?
3- 19th century Emerson, Thoreau, Muir
- Early 20th Roosevelt
- Value of nature discussed in qualitative terms
- beauty, character, manhood, connection to sacred
- Didnt think this needed to be proved.
- Not quantifiable, even ineffable.
- How could you put a dollar value on the worth of
American manhood? Of feeling the hand of God?
4Mid 20th century Different Approach
- Risk assessment
- Cost-benefit analysis
- Ecosystem services
- All attempts to demonstrate value of nature.
- To prove its value in a modern world that
calculates value in dollar terms. (Fight fire
with fire) - To counter criticisms that environmental
protection isnt worth the cost. (Pollution
control, but also habitat restoration, nature
preservation, etc.)
5Common criticism of CBA costs of regulation are
generally easy to calculate (e.g. scrubber on a
power plant), but the value of something like
clean air is hard to assess.
6CBA is intrinsically biased against regulation,
against environmental protection
7One response Quantify value of public goods,
like clean air, water, beautiful views
- In Del Mar, house with view of ocean costs
200,000 more than one without. - Value of ocean view easy to calculate.
8CBA is a tool, can be used in diverse ways.
- Nevertheless, in practice it has often meant
placing a burden on those who wish to protect the
environment to demonstrate that the proposed
protection will be worth the cost. - Value gained is at least as great as the cost of
implementation.
9In USA, CBA has been dominant approach
- Particularly in last decade.
10Alternative approach precaution
- Often, environmental harms are hard to predict.
When potential harms are uncertain, one should
err on the side of caution. - Burden of proof should not be on those who think
there might be harm, but on those who insist
there wont be.
11Err on the side of caution
- An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
- A stitch in time saves nine.
- The law of unintended consequences
12Precautionary principle now dominant approach in
Europe What exactly is the principle?
13Wingspread Statement, 1998Science and
Environmental Health Network
- We believe existing environmental regulations
and other decisions, particularly those based on
risk assessment, have failed to adequately
protect human health and the environment, as well
as the larger system of which humans are but a
part.
14- We believe there is compelling evidence that
damage to humans and the worldwide environment,
is of such magnitude and seriousness that new
principles for conducting human activities are
necessary.
15- While we realize that human activities may
involve hazards, people must proceed more
carefully than has been the case in recent
history. Corporations, government entities,
organizations, communities, scientists and other
individuals must adopt a precautionary approach
to all human endeavors.
16Therefore it is necessary to implement the
Precautionary Principle Where an activity raises
threats of harm to the environment or human
health, precautionary measures should be taken
even if some cause and effect relationships are
not fully established scientifically.
171982 World Charter for Nature, UN General
Assembly
- Activities which are likely to cause
irreversible damage to nature shall be avoided
and Activities which are likely to pose a
significant risk to nature shall be preceded by
an exhaustive examination their proponents shall
demonstrate that expected benefits outweight
potential damage to nature, and where potential
adverse effects are not fully understood, the
activities should not proceed.
181992 U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change,
(signed by President George H.W. Bush)
- In order to protect the environment, the
precautionary approach shall be widely applied by
States according to their capabilities. Where
there are threats of serious or irreversible
damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall
not be used as a reason for postponing
cost-effective measures to prevent environmental
degradation. - (Article 15)
19European Commission, 2000 "The precautionary
principle applies where scientific evidence is
insufficient, inconclusive or uncertain and
preliminary scientific evaluation indicates that
there are reasonable grounds for concern that the
potentially dangerous effects on the environment,
human, animal or plant health may be inconsistent
with the high level of protection chosen by the
EU".
20The January 29, 2000 Cartagena Protocol on
Biosafety (issue of GMOs)"Lack of scientific
certainty due to insufficient relevant scientific
information shall not prevent the Party of
import, in order to avoid or minimize such
potential adverse effects, from taking a
decision, as appropriate, with regard to the
import of the living modified organism in
question.http//www.cbd.int/biosafety/
21Since 2000, Official Policy of European Union
- Basic idea much older
- Vorsorgeprinzip foresight planning
- German Social Theory 1930s
- Risk prevention
- Ethical responsibility of nations and other
organizations to avoid harm, including
anticipating negative effects - Fallibility technology has unintended
consequences - Planning government role in anticipating future
problems
22Today, associated with six main ideas
231) Delay is costly, sometimes irreversible
- Preventative anticipation
- Dont delay until the child is dead to go to the
doctor. -
- We dont wait until a flu has reached pandemic
proportions before trying to develop vaccine. - Actual example Europe in the 1980s
- Dont wait until forests are all dead before
acting to stop acid rain
24- 2) Prudence requires ample margin of error,
especially when stakes are high - Dont wouldnt kill the penultimate breeding pair
of polar bears - You shouldnt allow arsenic in water to approach
toxic levels. - You build in a margin of safety
- More important the issue, the larger that margin
should be.
25- 3) Proportionality
- Dont take on large risks for small gains
- Is driving a big car really worth risking the
Antarctic? - Is a small increase in crop yield worth risking
damaging native plants of a country? - (Al Gore gold bars v. the whole Earth)
26- 4) Burden of proof
- Should be on those proposing actions that may do
damage, rather than vice versa (cf. US NEPA) - Related to point 1, the delay issue when in
doubt, rely on best available information, even
if imperfect or incomplete.
275) Intrinsic rights
- Other species have right to exist, nature is
intrinsic good - Therefore, actions should include this
consideration
28- 6) Differentiated responsibility
- Those who have most impacted environment in past
have most responsibility now (rich, highly
industrialized nations) - Kyoto Protocol Annex I nations.
- U.S. and western Europe (total impact, not just
current annual, or per capita) - Created most Greenhouse gases, overall,
therefore should bear most responsibility. - Also true for deforestation (cf. Brazil)
29Nearly all signatories agreed this was fair,
logical
- Annex 1 nations benefited the most--indeed, got
to be Annex 1 nations by burning fossil fuels. - Therefore should now take most responsibility
30U.S. rejected this.
- Byrd-Hagel Act 1995, rejected any climate treaty
that did not include developing nations. - Present President, and Republican
nominee-apparent take this stand must include
India and China in any international agreement. - Argument China is now (2007) 1 producer of
GHGs. - ButIndia and China have produced still far fewer
greenhouse gases overall than we have. - 25 of Chinas energy use is to produce products
for export market--almost entirely US and Europe!
31Objections to precautionary principle
- 1) Stifles economic growth
- All economic activity involves some environmental
impact. - Excessive caution discourages anyone from doing
anything
32- 2) Stifles innovation, creativity.
- Encourages a kind of worry wart mentality.
- Discourages risk taking.
- Result stodgy, fearful society.
- The Nanny society--always worrying about
skinning our knees - Is that what we want?And we might be stifling
the very innovations that could solve our
environmental problem, like new energy source
33Stitch in time may save nine, but haste makes
waste
- Acting before the science is in can be counter
productive. - Example smog in LA.
- Early regulations actually made science worse.
- Later work explained why. Chemical reactions had
been misinterpreted. - Money was wasted, did not achieve desired goal
- Therefore, sacrificing scientific standards
doesnt get you where you want to be.
34Idea of intrinsic rights makes no sense
- How can a tree have rights?
- And even if it did, what does this have to do
with precaution anyway? - People are adding additional principles not
inherent in the original idea of precaution
35What is precautionary for one person might not be
for another.
- I might argue that the U.S. invasion in Iraq was
precautionary. Why wait until Saddam attacks us? - My neighbor argues, that is was no precautionary,
it was reckless, because there was no imminent
risk. - We could have waited for the U.S. inspectors to
finish their job. - Depends on how you judge riskand which risks you
fear more. Risk of Saddam Hussein doing
something bad, or risk of getting involved in a
long, difficult, costly, perhaps unjustified war?
36Basic idea of precaution might be clear,
implementing it is not.
- How do you judge imminent risk?
- How do you know if inaction will be more costly
than premature action? - How do you judge how much scientific knowledge is
sufficient to act? - How do you determine proportionality, when
different people value different goods
differently? - How do you make other nations, individuals, take
the responsibility you feel they have? Implies
need for collective governance, Europe accepts,
USA does not.
37Precautionary principle in action Genetically
Engineered Organisms
- What are GMOs?
- What is the benefit?
- Improved crop yield
- Decreased need for fertilizers, pesticides
- Selective resistance to herbicides (Round-up
ready soybean) - Increased nutritional value
38What are the concerns?
- Safety of food supply
- At minimum--risk of allergies
- You are doing things whose consequences are
unknown - Safety of environment
- GMO crops get loose, take over
- Especially round-up ready--how do you kill it?
- Impact on non-target organisms. BT corn kills
butterflies - Outcrossing. Genes spread to other plants,
animals. - Terminator gene solution --gt but
39Concerns (continued)
- Equity
- Seeds are much more expensive than conventional,
- Poor farmers cant afford it
- If terminator genes added, have to buy fresh
seeds every year, unlike in past. - So how can this help them?
- Political stability
- Almost all patents held by US and European
companies - Do we want a small number of corporations
controlling global food supply?
40- GMOs are unnatural
- Playing god, messing with creation.
- No good ever comes of that
- Frankenfoods. And we know what happened to Dr.
Frankenstein. - Genetic engineering inconsistent with
stewardship. - Therefore some Christian groups opposed.
41- Christian Opposition includes
- Christian Scientists
- Church of Scotland, Program in Science, Religion,
Technology, Disturbs wisdom in natural order of
things. - New Zealand, Interchurch Commission on Genetic
Engineering, we should curb our natural hubris - Au Sable Institute for Environmental Studies,
abuse of creation - Rural Life Committee of the North Dakota Council
of Churches - Endorses precautionary principle as appropriate
form of humility in the development,
application, and expansion of GMO biotechnology
42 The problem of hype
- Argument in favor has been strongly focused on
feeding worlds hungry. - Corporations like Monsanto argue humanitarian
value. Trying to help the world, feed the poor. - BUTThere is no shortage of total food on earth.
There is a problem of distribution. - Experience shows making more food does not
decreased world hunger. (1950s --gt present) - Increased yield in US wont feed starving people
in Africa. And if Africans cant afford seeds,
there wont be increased yield there either.
43What does the precautionary principle really mean
in practice?
44David Magnus, Professor of Bioethics, Stanford
UniversityRisk Management v. The Precautionary
Principle
- Uncertainty used extensively by corporations,
most famously tobacco industry, to avoid
regulation - Doubt is out product
- Construct agnotology--producing ignorance,
confusion, by amplifying doubts - In response, environmentalists and health
advocates have turned to precautionary principle.
Response to exploitation of doubt.
45Uncertainty not an excuse for inaction
- Therefore, precautionary principle developed as
response to industries, states, etc (like
tobacco) who tried to use uncertainty to prevent
regulatory action - Political response to a political reality
46In Europe, used to oppose GMOs
- Interesting Shift Or even a kind of epistemic
reveral - Before uncertainty used by corporations to
stave off regulation (R J Reynolds, Exxon Mobil) - Now, uncertainty being advocates of regulation of
GMOs - We dont know what the harms may be, and we may
never know. Therefore, we shouldnt do it.
47Wingspread Statement. The precautionary
principle states that
- When (on the basis of available evidence) an
activity may harm human health or the
environment, a cautious approach sould be taken
even if the full extent of harm has not yet been
fully established. It recognizes that such
proof of harm may never be possible
48Burden of proof shifted. Power of uncertainty
harnessed to support regulation rather than
oppose it.
- Interesting question Who should bear the burden
of proof? - And how do we (as a society, a world) decide?
- And how do we deal with issues like GMOs, or
GHGs, where actions of one nation can affect
others?
49Precedents for considering burden of proof
- Criminal law innocent until proven guilty beyond
reasonable doubt. In this view, we could consider
GMOs ok unless someone provides evidence theres
a problem. But presumption of innocence is
intended to protect citizens from power of state.
Is this right model for new technologies? - Difficulty the group most qualified to find
evidence of problem is the manufacturer, who has
conflict of interest.
50Alternatives?
- Patent law Inventor has burden to demonstrate
that invention is novel, and does what it claims
to do. - FDA drug manufacturers have burden to
demonstrate new drug is effective and safe. - FDA probably closest relevant model, but many
recent failures.
51Current state of affairs
- US products assumed to be safe unless shown
otherwise - Europe, reverse.
- US, regulate products (food, under FDA) but not
process. Process is seen as scientific research. - Europe, process subject to precautionary
principle
52Current state of affairs
- BUT WTO has recently intervened.
- European Union tried to ban import of North
American beef enhanced by bovine growth hormone,
US and Canada brought to WTO as unfair trade
barrier. - WTO agreed with US, said regulations must be
science-based (ie burden of proof on regulator to
demonstrate risk of harm) - EU refused, was fined 124 million.
- Raises interesting sovereignty issues who are
WTO to tell Europe what rules and regulations
they can have? (What if tables were turned?)