A/HRC/54/31
34.
Safeguarding policies for the private sector were developed by the International
Finance Corporation in its performance standard 7 on Indigenous Peoples (2012) 43 and the
guidelines for multinational enterprises on responsible business conduct of the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).44 They both recall the right to free,
prior and informed consent and/or human rights impact assessments, but still fall short of
interpreting international human rights law.
35.
The OECD guidelines include a national contact point for responsible business
conduct grievance mechanism, which handles complaints against companies alleged to have
failed to meet the guideline standards. To date, 51 countries, concentrated in Europe and the
Americas, have established national contact points and grievance mechanisms. In 2022,
facing a growing number of grievance cases involving Indigenous Peoples, OECD published
a guide for national contact points on the rights of Indigenous Peoples when handling specific
instances. 45 OECD parties can also find useful guidance on Indigenous Peoples in the
decision of the Norwegian national contact point in 2011 related to the Intex nickel mine in
the Philippines, as it considered free, prior and informed consent requirements in some detail
as part of community and stakeholder engagement, as well as impact assessments, disclosure
and transparency.
36.
The Equator Principles are voluntary guidelines adopted by 97 financial institutions
in 37 countries to ensure that the projects they finance and advise on are developed in a
socially responsible manner that reflects sound environmental management practices. 46 They
follow the International Finance Corporation performance standards, but only apply them to
projects with a volume of over $100 million and only refer to free, prior and informed consent
being applied in “non-designated” countries, namely non-OECD countries. There is no
grievance mechanism or other independent compliance monitoring mechanism.47
37.
The so-called Cancun safeguards address all levels of financial actors, in calling for
“The full and effective participation of relevant stakeholders, in particular indigenous peoples
and local communities”.48 The Convention on Biological Diversity also provides guidance
through its Akwé: Kon Voluntary Guidelines (2004) and section C of the Global Biodiversity
Framework recalls the human rights of Indigenous Peoples.
38.
Seeking the free, prior and informed consent of Indigenous Peoples is recognized as
an essential element of human rights due diligence, risk mitigation and human rights
responsibilities.49 Safeguarding policies and guidelines have not elaborated on the scope and
meaning of “consent”, which is sometimes wrongly understood as requiring only
consultation, rather than as a substantive prerequisite to proceeding with a project. A study
by the Expert Mechanism on the rights of Indigenous Peoples that points to the important
role of the autonomous free, prior and informed consent protocols of Indigenous People as
authoritative guidance should also act as a reference for the scope and meaning of
“consent”.50
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
10
See https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/es/729401491377002155/pdf/113847-WP-ENGLISHPS7-Indigenous-peoples-2012-PUBLIC.pdf.
See https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/finance-and-investment/oecd-guidelines-for-multinationalenterprises-on-responsible-business-conduct_81f92357-en.
See http://mneguidelines.oecd.org/guide-for-national-contact-points-on-the-rights-of-indigenouspeoples-when-handling-specific-instances.pdf.
See https://equator-principles.com/.
See Jose Aylwin and Johannes Rohr, The UN Guiding Principles on Business & Human Rights and
Indigenous Peoples: Progress Achieved, the Implementation Gap and Challenges for the Next Decade
(International Work Group on Indigenous Affairs and Indigenous Peoples Rights International, 2021),
pp. 35 and 36.
FCCC/CP/2010/7/Add.1, appendix 1, para. 2 (d).
A/71/291.
A/HRC/39/62.
GE.23-13366