London judges reverse course to reopen $9b Brazil dam lawsuit against BHP

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London judges reverse course to reopen $9b Brazil dam lawsuit against BHP

By Kirstin Ridley

London: London’s Court of Appeal has made a U-turn by agreeing to reopen a $9.4 billion lawsuit by 200,000 claimants against mining giant BHP, reviving a case over a dam rupture behind Brazil’s worst environmental disaster.

Lawyers for one of the largest group claims in English legal history have been pushing to resurrect the £5 billion ($9.4 billion) lawsuit against BHP since a lower court struck out the lawsuit as an abuse of process last year – and a Court of Appeal judge upheld that decision in March.

The collapse of the Fundao dam in 2015 killed 19 and poured roughly 40 million cubic metres of mining waste into communities.

The collapse of the Fundao dam in 2015 killed 19 and poured roughly 40 million cubic metres of mining waste into communities.Credit: AP

But in a highly unusual move, three Appeal Court judges on Tuesday reversed course and granted permission for appeal, saying they believed it had a “real prospect of success”.

The collapse in 2015 of the Fundao dam, owned by the Samarco venture between BHP and Brazilian iron ore mining giant Vale, killed 19 and obliterated villages as a torrent of more than 40 million cubic metres of mining waste swept into the Doce river and Atlantic Ocean more than 650 kilometres away.

Tom Goodhead, a PGMBM managing partner who is bringing the claim on behalf of Brazilian individuals, businesses, churches, organisations, municipalities and indigenous people, called it a “monumental judgement”.

Frederico de Assis Faria, Attorney-General of Brazil’s hard-hit district of Mariana, said victims now had “an opportunity for real justice” six years after the disaster.

BHP, the world’s largest mining company by market value, has labelled the case pointless and wasteful, saying it duplicates proceedings in Brazil and the work of the Renova Foundation, an entity created by the company and its Brazilian partners to manage reparations and repairs.

“BHP’s position remains that the proceedings do not belong in the UK,” it said in a statement.

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‘Good day for justice’

The case was revived after PGMBM in April applied for an oral Court of Appeal hearing – reserved only for exceptional cases – and argued the appeal judge had not properly grappled with arguments about why the case should proceed.

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Martyn Day, the Leigh Day lawyer who has taken on miner Vedanta and oil giant Shell in English courts on behalf of villagers over alleged pollution in Zambia and oil spills in the Niger delta respectively, welcomed the ruling.

“It is highly unusual for the Court of Appeal to use this mechanism (of an oral hearing) for reviewing a decision of a fellow member of the court,” he said. “A good day for justice.”

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Claimant lawyers have argued that most of their clients have not brought proceedings in Brazil, that they are entitled to sue BHP in England and that Brazilian litigation is so lengthy that it cannot provide full redress in a realistic timeframe.

The lawsuit is the latest battle to establish whether multinationals can be held liable for the conduct of overseas subsidiaries on their home turf.

The appeal is expected to be heard next year and any ruling is likely to be further appealed to the Supreme Court in London.

Reuters

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