By Brian
Bienkowski for the The Daily
Climate
Contrary
to many corny jokes, lawyers do follow a code of ethics. But there’s a glaring
omission in the professions’ ethical outline: the environment.
The
American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct is a suggested
blueprint for state bars, laying out a boilerplate for client-lawyer
relationships, public service, communication and other matters of the
professions. “It talks about other legal obligations for third parties, but
never talks about the environment,” said Tom Lininger, a professor at the
University of Oregon School of Law.
Lininger
wrote the “time has come to remedy the conspicuous omission of environmental
protection from the list of lawyers’ ethical duties,” in a paper
for the Boston College Law Review. He argues in the paper that, as
things currently stand, lawyers are ethically encouraged to advocate for
clients but there are no incentives for minimizing potential environmental
harm. He proposed a series of “green ethics” amendments to ABA’s rules.
He suggests allowing lawyers to reveal confidential client information to prevent “imminent, substantial and irremediable environmental damage”, and having lawyers inform clients of environmental damage they might do or plan to do and advise how to avoid such risk.
This
would require a pretty fundamental change in law: getting rid of the laser-like
focus of lawyers on the interests of nothing but their client.
Some
of Lininger’s proposed changes are a bit more far-reaching, such as the
professional responsibility of providing pro bono services that improve
environmental protection or adding an “environmental scorecard” to hold firms
accountable for their environmental bona fides.
The
duty of confidentiality has always been subject to obligations imposed by
law. In cases of suspected child abuse, for instance, the duty of
disclosure trumps confidentiality.
Another example is for cases of financial
crime or fraud. Both the child abuse and financial fraud exemptions are to
“avoid significant harm to vulnerable third parties,” Lininger wrote, which he
said can easily apply to the environment.
The
focus of the law boils down to protecting people, said Irma Russell, a law
professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. “People are impacted
inevitably when the environment is hurt. [People’s health] is hand-in-glove
with environmental harm,” she said.
Russell
called Lininger’s suggestions “good for clients as well as society."
“The
modern world has a lot of environmental hazards and a regime where people don’t
feel pressure to protect public safety is unbalanced and a bad situation,” she
said. “Allowing lawyers to be true advisors rather than mouthpieces
facilitates good decisions by clients.”
In
a paper published earlier this year in the George
Washington Journal of Energy and Environmental Law, Russell makes
the case that advancements in environmental regulations—such as the U.S. EPA’s
New Generation Compliance, featuring bolstered monitoring, detection,
reporting and enforcement tools—is heralding a “new age” of environmental law:
one in which lawyers play an increasing role in corporate compliance.
“The
lawyer’s involvement in explaining compliance and the risks of noncompliance
provides a necessary predicate for next generation compliance success,” she
writes, arguing such involvement falls within the profession’s ethical duty of
serving the public good.
She
said such legal environmental vigilance is even more important in the wake of a Department of Justice memorandum released
last fall that made it a federal priority to hold individuals accountable for
corporate offenses.
There
has been a spate of recent court cases dealing with climate change including a racketeering
investigation of ExxonMobil alleging a climate science cover-up
for years andchildren
suing Massachusetts for not reducing greenhouse gases as
obligated.
Kassie
Siegel, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law
Institute, said such cases are only going to bolster scrutiny on the ethical
obligations of lawyers as countries deal with the “single largest threat to
society.”
“Some
of the most important legal issues today are large corporations lying about
climate change and being able to pollute a few more years,” Siegel said. “The
role of lawyers helping them do that and the ethical considerations governing
our profession will increasingly come under the microscope.”
But
many environmental impacts are difficult to discern, and lawyers aren’t always
trained to make those calls, said Mark Latham, deputy vice dean for academic
affairs and professor of law at Vermont Law School.
While
certainly a “thought-provoking” concept, the idea of an environmental ethics
code for lawyers is troublesome, Latham added.
“I
really don’t think that it’s the role of lawyers to minimize harm to the
environment. It’s our responsibility to represent clients,” said Latham, who
previously worked for a firm that counseled clients regarding environmental
regulatory compliance.
Latham
said lawyers are simply not in a position to make a determination on what
constitutes “imminent, substantial and irremediable” environmental harm.
The
ABA declined to comment on Lininger’s suggestions. Getting the organization to
modify its ethics code might be a reach, but Lininger is tapping into a global
shift in the international zeitgeist toward environmental protection as an
ethical duty.
The
most profound recent example was Pope Francis’ call for an “ecological
conversion” in last year’s encyclical, which focused on the environment and the
moral need for every person on “our common home” to address issues such as
climate change.
Such
views have reached other high-powered institutions, with President Obama and
his Administration calling carbon cuts a moral obligation, and the United
Nations’ echoing of the pope’s message.
“It
is an issue of social justice, human rights and fundamental ethics. We
have a profound responsibility to protect the fragile web of life on this
Earth, and to this generation and those that will follow,” said United
Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at a Vatican meeting with
Pope Francis last year.
You
will find no such language in the American Bar Association Model Rules of
Professional Conduct—ethical rules adopted in the 1980s.
However,
it’s not completely unheard of. In Lininger’s home state, for example, the
Sustainable Future Section of the Oregon state bar is designed to involve the
lawyers in playing a role in reducing man-made climate change and
sustainability promotion.
“Ultimately
the legal profession is supposed to achieve justice,” Siegel said. “Justice
can’t include just helping clients, when there’s an existential threat to our
life support system all professions need to grapple with that—including
lawyers.”
The
Daily Climate is an independent, foundation-funded news service covering
energy, the environment and climate change. Find us on Twitter @TheDailyClimate or
email editor Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski [at] EHN.org