Current:Home > ScamsPanama Enacts a Rights of Nature Law, Guaranteeing the Natural World’s ‘Right to Exist, Persist and Regenerate’ -EverVision Finance
Panama Enacts a Rights of Nature Law, Guaranteeing the Natural World’s ‘Right to Exist, Persist and Regenerate’
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:22:58
Panama is the latest country to recognize the legal rights of nature, giving environmentalists a new tool to fight ecological harm.
After just over a year of debate in Panama’s National Assembly, President Laurentino Cortizo signed legislation on Thursday that defines nature as “a unique, indivisible and self-regulating community of living beings, elements and ecosystems interrelated to each other that sustains, contains and reproduces all beings.”
The legislation includes six paragraphs of rights extended to nature, including the “right to exist, persist and regenerate its life cycles,” the “right to conserve its biodiversity,” and the “right to be restored after being affected directly or indirectly by any human activity.”
Panama now joins Bolivia, New Zealand, Bangladesh, Ecuador, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, among other countries, which have either issued court decisions, enacted laws or amended constitutions recognizing the legal rights of nature. Panama’s law will go into effect one year after it is published in the country’s Official Gazette.
The legislation also imposes new obligations on Panama’s government, including a requirement that its plans, policies and programs respect the rights of nature. It instructs the government to develop manufacturing processes and energy policies that safeguard ecosystems, and it requires the government to promote the rights of nature as part of its foreign policy.
Juan Diego Vásquez Gutiérrez, Panama’s youngest congressman at 25, sponsored the law and said that the legislation will make it easier to protect the environment because it grants legal standing to people and organizations to enforce the rights of nature.
“For a country so rich in biodiversity like Panama, taking care of nature is a step in the right direction,” he said. “It will open up economic opportunities, like in Costa Rica, for tourism involving nature and for sustainable development.”
The idea that nature, like humans, corporations and governments, should have legal rights emanates from the world view of some Indigenous cultures as well as the “deep ecology” movement of the 1970s. Panama’s legislation states that the country recognizes the close relationship between the rights of nature and the beliefs of its Indigenous peoples and “will promote the incorporation of their ancestral knowledge in the interpretation and implementation of rights and obligations contained in this Law.”
The view holds that all living beings, not just humans, have intrinsic value and that humans are interconnected with the natural world. The belief contrasts with the utilitarian ethos, popular in industrialized nations, that nature exists to serve humankind and that humans have the right to commodify and, at times, destroy ecosystems.
Proponents of the rights of nature movement attribute ecological crises like climate change and biodiversity loss to the mindset and legal instruments that treat nature as human property subject to exploitation. Critics of the movement argue that rights of nature laws will stop all development activity and harm economies. In places like Ecuador, where rights of nature laws have been put into place, court rulings have struck down some permits for extractive activity and required restoration of ecosystems harmed by development. But, development activity has, for the most part, continued. In Panama’s three legislative debates over the rights of nature bill, no real opposition emerged, according to Vásquez.
Panama, famous for its canal separating Central and South America, is rich in biodiversity, with vast swaths of tropical rainforests and mangroves that are home to over ten thousand species of plants and animals like jaguars and the spectacled bear. Areas like the Darién and Veraguas regions are also home to Indigenous peoples. But those areas have been under threat from development and extractive activity.
From 2002 to 2020, the country, about half the size of Pennsylvania, lost about 194,000 acres of humid tropical forest, one of the most biologically diverse types of forest, according to Global Forest Watch. That is an area about four and a half times as large as Washington, D.C.
“Panama is one of the 25 most megadiverse countries globally, playing a pivotal role in preserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change,” said Constanza Prieto Figelist, Latin American legal director at the Earth Law Center, which helped draft the legislation. “The approval of this Law is fundamental because it joins the efforts of Colombia and Ecuador to recognize the rights of nature, creating a conservation corridor in the region that opens the doors for holistic and joint governance of forests, rivers, and the ocean.”
The law was originally proposed by a marine biologist and National Geographic Explorer, Callie Veelenturf, who had been studying sea turtles in Panama’s Pearl Islands archipelago. Worried about threats to endangered species, she approached Vásquez and Panama’s first lady, Yazmín de Cortizo, with a proposal for national legislation.
Veelenturf, who is from Massachusetts but lives in Panama, said she had no background or experience in environmental law and policy, and that she drew on her fieldwork experience as well as rights of nature laws from other countries.
“I had no expectations, but simply tried to bring compelling visuals of threats facing nature from the field, political arguments, and powerful statistics to the table,” Veelenturf, 29 and founder of the Leatherback Project and Rights for Nature, said. “I hope that increasingly everyday citizens that have a knowledge of the threats facing biodiversity will not be intimidated by the legal system and will speak up to propose new laws protecting nature.”
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- 81 arrested as APEC summit protest shuts down the Bay Bridge in San Francisco
- Backpage founder Michael Lacey convicted of 1 money laundering count
- Judge declares mistrial after jury deadlocks in trial of ex-officer in deadly Breonna Taylor raid
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Cutting a teaspoon of salt is comparable to taking blood pressure medication
- Oakland mourns Athletics' move, but owner John Fisher calls it a 'great day for Las Vegas'
- Max Verstappen unimpressed with excess and opulence of Las Vegas Grand Prix
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- National Book Awards: See all the winners, including Justin Torres, Ned Blackhawk
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Authorities arrest man in death of Jewish protester in California
- TGL dome slated for new Tiger Woods golf league loses power, collapses
- Raise a Glass to This Heartwarming Modern Family Reunion
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Syria’s president grants amnesty, reduced sentences on anniversary of coup that put father in power
- Were Latin musicians snubbed by the Grammys? Maybe. But they're winning in other ways
- RSV is straining some hospitals, and US officials are releasing more shots for newborns
Recommendation
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
Ex-sergeant pleads guilty to failing to stop fatal standoff with man in mental health crisis
Former U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper says defeating Hamas means dealing with Iran once and for all
This year, Mama Stamberg's relish shares the table with cranberry chutney
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Mauricio Umansky Slams BS Speculation About Where He and Kyle Richards Stand Amid Separation
How do cheap cell phone plans make money? And other questions
Kevin Costner, 'Yellowstone' star, partners with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters on new blend