16. Treaty on Transnational Corporations: Democratic Regulation of their Conduct
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Background

1. Transnational corporations (TNCs) are responsible in large part for the global environmental crisis and for many social and economic problems resulting from "development". TNCs are the main actors in a development process which involves concentration of economic power and production and which leads to social and political inequity and loss of cultural diversity.

2. Presently there is no force, governmental, intergovernmental, or nongovernmental which is capable of monitoring or regulating the activities of these large corporations. In fact, recent events show a trend to give more power to TNCs.

3. The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) has abdicated its responsibility to take measures to control TNC activities, instead promoting TNCs contribution to "sustainable development" and willingness to regulate themselves. The United Nations (UN) has given up trying to develop a Code for the TNCs and the Center on Transnational Corporations has been weakened. Proposals on trade related investment measures and intellectual property rights in the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) would strengthen the power of TNCs vis a vis governments, parliaments and the public.

General Principles

4. This treaty has as its aim democratic regulation of TNC conduct. TNCs have the duty to respect national sovereignty, respect the health and environmental rights of the public, and refrain from financial, pricing or technological activities that cause socio-economic difficulties to host countries.

5. International mechanisms should hold TNCs liable for the harmful effects caused by their operations in all countries of operation. Contractual clauses binding TNCs to agreement with host governments and communities should be enforceable in home and host countries.

6. TNCs should be held to the highest environmental, health, safety and labor standards in all countries of operations.

7. Workers and unions have the right to representation and participation in environmental and health audits. Workers have the right to training, control and to negotiate social, economic, health and environmental conditions in North and South.

8. Freedom of information for all citizens, environmental groups, labor unions and governmental agencies, including the names and quantities of chemicals on site, data on emissions, access to waste streams for independent sampling and analysis, access to environmental assessments and audits, should be guaranteed and take precedence over proprietary information and trade secrets.

9. Clean production methods and technologies should be used for all new TNC projects. Environmental assessments will determine whether a proposed project uses clean production. For existing operations, environmental audits will be the basis for planning a conversation to clean production.

10. TNCs shall not trade in wastes, banned or unregistered products, and shall not transfer obsolete or hazardous technologies.

11. Workers displaced by conversion to ecologically sound practices should be retrained and compensated by the TNCs.

12. The precautionary approach, which places the burden of proof of no harm on the potential polluter rather than on the environment or potential victims, should govern TNCs practices.

Proposals

13. The following are suggested action components generated by the treaty negotiators. Their division into information and action sections is for organizational purposes only, and the list is intended to be a launching point for involvement in this issue, not an exhaustive list of possibilities.

14. Informational Components:

15. Action Components:
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