A/HRC/54/31
IV. Growing recognition of the role of Indigenous Peoples in the
transition to a green economy
A.
Renewable energy
39.
The finance sector is expected to increasingly fund projects related to the transition to
renewable energy, such as hydropower, wind farms and the mining of lithium for batteries.
The transition is both urgently necessary to respond to climate change and is expected to
support economic growth. Regulation of such projects at the national level must ensure
respect for and protection of Indigenous Peoples, including in terms of access to energy and
inclusiveness.51 Financial actors should recognize that renewable energy projects are often
located on or near Indigenous territories52 and should undertake human rights due diligence
to address all actual and potential negative impacts of their projects on Indigenous Peoples
and identify, assess and address all the risks to rights holders.
40.
Financial actors should be especially cautious when investing in projects such as
lithium mining, a sector frequently fast-tracked to accelerate the transition to electric
vehicles, too often without due regard for the rights of Indigenous Peoples. Inadequate and
non-participatory environmental and social impact assessments, lack of free, prior and
informed consent, insufficient or non-existent remuneration of Indigenous Peoples on whose
lands the mining sites are located, as well as negative health and environmental impacts from
extraction through to battery disposal, have been reported as important issues for some
Indigenous Peoples.53
41.
Nomadic and semi-nomadic Indigenous Peoples are particularly at risk from energy
transition and other green projects. In Africa and Europe, wind farms and geothermal projects
have been undertaken without their free, prior and informed consent. 54 Too often,
Governments and foreign investors assume that land used by nomadic herders and
pastoralists is simply “empty”. Investors too often rely on formal registration of State or
private ownership, or government assurances that land is available to use, when a diligent
independent analysis prior to investment would have indicated that the land may be subject
to the customary rights of Indigenous Peoples.
42.
Indigenous Peoples have typically been excluded or marginalized in national energy
distribution grids. Benefit-sharing should therefore be an important consideration in the
funding of renewable energy projects. The Special Rapporteur has observed instances where
electricity-generating projects failed to include a plan for distributing electricity to the
Indigenous Peoples on whose land and resources the electricity was produced. Indigenous
Peoples have sometimes even been required to buy the electricity produced on their lands at
market prices.55 At the same time, funders should be aware that the promise of employment
and other benefits offered to Indigenous Peoples to acquire their lands does not, in itself,
constitute proper consultation for obtaining free, prior and informed consent.
43.
The mandate has received numerous complaints concerning dams and associated
infrastructures that were planned or implemented without the consent of Indigenous Peoples,
causing their forced displacement or the degradation of their environment and means of
sustenance. 56 Recent complaints involved a hydropower project in Nepal funded by the
51
52
53
54
55
56
GE.23-13366
See Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, general recommendation
No. 39 (2022); and https://www.humanrights.dk/publications/womens-human-rights-energytransition-sub-saharan-africa-roundtable-event-outcome.
See, for example, John R. Owen, Eleonore Lebre and Deanna Kemp, “Energy transition minerals
(ETMs): a global dataset of projects”, University of Queensland data collection (2022), available
from ttps://doi.org/10.48610/12b9a6e.
See submission by the Shoshone Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley.
See, for example, https://media.businesshumanrights.org/media/documents/Lake_Turkana_Wind_Power_Judgment_October_2021.pdf and
https://www.domstol.no/globalassets/upload/hret/decisions-in-english-translation/hr-2021-1975-s.pdf.
See Dan Chu, “Investing with tribal partners to create a climate safe world”, GreenMoney,
(March 2020).
See Submission by the Shoshone Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley.
11