Yahoo – AFP,
Aurélia End, 24 Sep 2015
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The
revelations shaking Volkswagen can be traced to the work of the US-based
group
International Council on Clean Transportation (AFP Photo/John Macdougall)
|
Paris (AFP)
- Volkswagen's worldwide pollution cheating has been exposed in large part
thanks to independent campaigners, a growing force in the scrutiny of
multinationals whose activities can escape the gaze of official regulators.
The
revelations shaking Volkswagen, the world's biggest automobile manufacturer by
sales with a workforce of 590,000 people, can be traced to the work of the
US-based group International Council on Clean Transportation, which has a
worldwide staff of 27.
Working
with engineers at West Virginia University, they uncovered significantly higher
levels of pollution spewing out of the exhaust pipes of cars on the road than
those recorded in official tests.
Drew
Kodjak, executive director of the non-profit group, said the discrepancies were
found for cars in Europe.
"It's
up to the regulators in Europe to figure out whether or not there's a defeat
device," he said in an interview with AFP this week.
"In
the United States, our research triggered further investigation, but the defeat
software was uncovered by the regulators."
Non-governmental
organisations have become key to exposing such scandals, said Yann Louvel,
coordinator of BankTrack, a network of organisations and people worldwide
tracking banks' activities.
List of
targets grows
The list of
multinationals feeling the heat from campaign groups is growing.
French
construction group Vinci has been attacked by Paris-based Sherpa,
self-described defender of the victims of economic crimes, over working
conditions at its construction sites for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. Vinci has
denied the allegations and sued for defamation.
Non-governmental
organisations pursued Western brands over the conditions in clothes factories
overseas after the 2013 Rana Plaza garment factory collapse in Bangladesh,
which killed more than 1,100 people. The campaigns helped to push companies to
contribute to a $30 million a victims' compensation fund.
Food giants
have been forced to review their palm oil operations following campaigns by
environmental groups warning of the dangers of deforestation.
After coming
under heavy criticism, Apple in 2012 asked labour watchdog Fair Labor
Association to assess the conditions for workers at factories of its major
Chinese supplier Foxconn.
Non-governmental
organisations, or NGOs, have also alerted national authorities to the ways
multinationals such as Starbucks or Google are able to enjoy low tax rates.
'How
could they miss it?'
"NGOs
have become more professional and stronger," said Oxfam charity campaigner
Nicolas Vercken.
"Ten
years ago when we asked for a meeting with the French foreign ministry they
expected us to come asking for money for a humanitarian catastrophe,"
Vercken said.
"Today
they see us for our expertise or because we are seen as a possible
nuisance," he said.
The rising
professionalism of campaign groups was illustrated by the Volkswagen scandal:
the International Council on Clean Transportation is staffed by former
automobile industry managers, bristling with diplomas and sporting ties.
Sherpa, for
example, relies on its network of lawyers and legal experts to bring
corporations to court with sophisticated legal arguments, said its director,
Laetitia Liebert.
Like other
NGOs, Sherpa uses social networks to lend "strength, leverage and
protection" when it targets big companies, she said.
For
BankTrack's Louvel, the Volkswagen scandal shows the important role played by
NGOs.
"But
you also wonder how the traditional regulators could have missed it," he
said.
"It's
worrying given the small resources that NGOs have," Louvel said. "It
is a bit easy to rely on us."



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