ESG: The Brussels effect at a crossroads
19 Jun - 20 Jun 2025
Session information
Keynote address: ESG and AI – technology, friend or foe?
Thursday 19 June (1545 - 1605)
Description
Lawyers play a crucial role as advisors to clients, providing context for legal advice that extends beyond traditional boundaries. The UNGP’s and CSDDD are two examples of standards (one soft, one hard law) whereby companies are obligated to understand, monitor and mitigate their adverse human rights and environmental impacts. With the advent of artificial intelligence, new challenges and opportunities arise, implicating lawyers' ethical obligations. AI presents a double-edged sword in the realm of environmental protection and human rights. For example, AI-powered satellite imagery analysis has improved the detection of deforestation in the Amazon, allowing authorities to respond more swiftly to illegal logging activities. At the same time, facial recognition software and zero-click forms of spyware represent a threat to the ongoing activities of environmental defenders. Not to mention the computing power required to build and run AI systems demands significant energy and water resources, potentially exacerbating environmental stress in already vulnerable areas.
As advisors, lawyers must navigate these complex intersections, balancing the potential benefits of AI with its risks to human rights and the environment. They must consider not only the legal implications but also the broader ethical and societal impacts of AI implementation in their clients' operations. This expanded role requires lawyers to be well-versed in both the technological aspects of AI and its ethical implications potential for human rights and environmental sustainability.