Tree-huggers, board advisers, contract shapers: The lawyers leading the way for nature

Lawyers are shaking off the profession’s dusty old image, as they join campaigners to protect the planet and find creative ways to transform business as usual. From ensuring company boardrooms defer to ‘Mother Nature’, to defending the rights of trees, to future-proofing contracts: legal experts aren’t waiting around for governments to make the sweeping changes we need. But, as the pressure mounts to act decisively on climate change, how do lawyers balance professionalism and progress?

Paul Powlesland is perhaps one of the few lawyers whose job has involved sitting in a tree in protest. The London-based barrister, who founded the community interest company Lawyers for Nature, has become known as the legal defender of trees – including advising a group of residents in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, who last year were protesting the unlawful felling of dozens of 120-year-old lime trees. When the authorities apparently ignored his advice, Powlesland realised more drastic action was needed. Crucially, though, his tree-climbing action was based on solid ground. “He had done his research and he knew he was on the right side of the law,” says Jessie Mond Wedd, a legal consultant at Lawyers for Nature.

Powlesland’s direct action is one example of how lawyers can be activists while staying carefully within the bounds of the law. But there are many other ways in which the law can be used “creatively”, as Mond Wedd puts it, to make an impact. 

In 2022, vegan cosmetics brand Faith in Nature made history when it became the first ever company to put “nature” on its board. It began when the company’s directors approached Lawyers for Nature with a rather strange request: could they somehow make nature their “boss” to ensure they were not harming the natural world? Lawyers for Nature’s co-founder Brontie Ansell worked with the Earth Law Centre and combined knowledge of corporate law with the concept of ‘rights of nature’ – the idea that ecosystems and species have legal rights to exist and thrive in themselves, not only for the benefit of people – to find a solution. This involved appointing a representative of nature, not as a boss, but as a non-executive director – someone who would have the right to attend board meetings, consult other experts when needed, and report on how decisions were made. This drew on the precedent of guardianship: children, for instance, can be legally represented by an adult acting in their interests.

Read more on Pioneers Post about car company Riversimple’s 'Future Guardian Governance' model, and how cheesemaker Willicroft made ‘Mother Nature’ its CEO

Faith in Nature has given its nature representative equal power to the other non-exec directors; but it could have given it veto rights, Mond Wedd explains. “Any company that does this can choose how hard or soft they want to go. That's why it's quite a creative process. It depends on the business.”

Nor is it necessarily about curtailing the profit motive. Rather, “it's that you've now got somebody on your shoulder, essentially overseeing your decisions and making sure that the decisions that you make are the best possible ones for nature”.

Faith in Nature is keen for others to follow suit, and is sharing regular updates on the new setup. So far, “nature” has influenced two strategic decisions: agreement on a “route out of” plastics and work to explore more sustainable ways of sourcing palm oil. According to Mond Wedd, the company has also found that – contrary to what some might expect – having a nature director has actually sped up decision-making, because they’re able to quickly consult “nature”, or her panel of experts, rather than trying to figure out the answers themselves.

Replication

So far at least four other organisations have either put nature on their board or are in the process of doing so. One of them is UK homewares company House of Hackney, which, supported by Lawyers for Nature, appointed a non-executive director of nature and future generations in November 2023. Among the changes the company is exploring is how it might pay “royalties” to nature – for example when using a beautiful landscape for a photoshoot, just as one would pay a property owner to use their building. It’s an example of how the rights of nature concept shifts mindsets, says Mond Wedd. “It trickles down into your brain to start to consider nature in a way that you hadn't before… It gives it an agency and a discourse.”

Rights of nature movements, often driven by Indigenous groups, are gaining momentum around the world as a key legal mechanism to protect ecosystems from harm. In 2008, Ecuador recognised the rights of nature in its constitution, later becoming the world’s first nation to apply these laws to protect forests from mining activity. In 2017, New Zealand granted legal personhood to the Whanganui River, influencing similar decisions in Bangladesh and India. Bolivia, Uganda, the US, Canada, Brazil, Mexico and Northern Ireland all have some recognition of the rights of nature in either their constitution, national laws or local regulations.

But such changes depend on the legal framework of the country. In February 2024, a British government official told the United Nations that the UK government could never accept that nature has rights. “That's why we're trying to use the law as creatively as we can, because we don't think we can sit around and wait for the government,” Mond Wedd says. Since UK corporate law is relatively flexible – it’s possible to amend a company’s articles of association as long as shareholders agree – it offers a way in. As Ansell, speaking at a 2023 event hosted by the Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers, put it, “Even as a company lawyer, it [had] never crossed my mind how powerful that area of law was, that it could actually circumvent government and start telling a new story about rights of nature in the boardroom.”

Read more: What does it mean to be an impact lawyer? Four myths and four opportunities 

Uncharted territory

Lawyers for Nature is in talks with more companies, as well as nonprofits, interested in the idea of putting nature on their board. But it’s still a very new idea: any organisation that does pursue this path needs to be ready to be “pioneering” and to make mistakes along the way, says Mond Wedd. In addition, Faith in Nature and House of Hackney are both relatively small, family-run companies; replicating this within a much bigger company would likely be a lot harder, since it would require consensus from many parties – investors, shareholders, board members. Even then, the process can be lengthy, as those involved figure out all the detail. 

But the effort is well worth it, Mond Wedd says: both Faith in Nature and House of Hackney have indicated significant benefits. “You get a huge amount of positive feedback from the fact that you are leading the way into something quite new and uncharted.”

Barrister Paul Powlesland – surrounded by tree surgeons, security staff and police as he resisted unlawful felling – has become known as the lawyer for trees.

Barrister Paul Powlesland – surrounded by tree surgeons, security staff and police as he resisted unlawful felling – has become known as the lawyer for trees.

Cosmetics brand Faith in Nature made history in 2022 when it became the first ever company to put “nature” on its board.

Cosmetics brand Faith in Nature made history in 2022 when it became the first ever company to put “nature” on its board.

Lawyers for Nature's Jessie Mond Wedd worked closely with House of Hackney, the second UK company to put nature on its board.

Lawyers for Nature's Jessie Mond Wedd worked closely with House of Hackney, the second UK company to put nature on its board.

Thanks to the relative flexibility of UK company law, corporate boardrooms can go further than many realise to recognise the rights of nature.

Thanks to the relative flexibility of UK company law, corporate boardrooms can go further than many realise to recognise the rights of nature.

New Zealand's Whanganui River was the first river in the world to be recognised as a legal "person" in 2017.

New Zealand's Whanganui River was the first river in the world to be recognised as a legal "person" in 2017.

Clauses for the climate

Drafting contracts may not sound like edge-of-your-seat stuff. But for Matt Gingell, it’s magical. “Every time you use a contract, it's an opportunity for impact,” he says. 

Gingell is the founder and chair of Chancery Lane Project, a nonprofit that provides clauses that anyone can insert into commercial agreements and legal documents. (Chancery Lane, in London, is the historic heart of the UK’s legal profession.) Drafted and peer-reviewed by legal and environmental experts around the world, these clauses encourage rapid decarbonisation and reduced climate impact, and have been used by companies like Vodafone, Salesforce and Australian telecoms firm Telstra, public bodies like the UK’s Environment Agency, and New Zealand’s green investment bank. In fact, they’re relevant to “virtually everything in the world that has a contract”.

How does it work in practice? A lender might add a clause that requires the borrower to set net-zero targets. Or a company might include wording to avoid “baking in” harmful practices. Gingell recalls an organisation that, having declared a climate emergency, wanted to move its energy contract onto a green tariff. But it was locked into a five-year deal to buy energy produced from polluting sources. A more carefully worded contract could have prevented this.

“As technology is evolving so quickly, the ability to pivot or amend the contract and move to greener technologies is incredibly important across many, many sectors,” says Gingell, who created Chancery Lane Project in 2019, alongside his day job in corporate law. That’s particularly relevant for public sector bodies that procure goods and services years in advance. 

The documentation, drafted by hundreds of legal brains working pro bono, also saves time. “Most contracting professionals, particularly lawyers, are really time-poor,” says Gingell. Right now, they’re preoccupied with factoring in everything from inflation to sanctions and armed conflict. “It's hard to make time and space for climate.”

Child’s play

New legislation is sometimes named either after the person who drove its creation, or after a person whose tragic story inspired the change. Chancery Lane Project clauses – named “Madeline’s clause”, “Rafa’s clause”, “Adam’s clause” and so on – are a little different: each one represents a child chosen by the drafting team, whose future will ultimately be affected by this work. 

“Lots of people who don't understand the narrative think it's lawyers’ egos, naming the causes after the person who did the drafting. It's really nice to correct them,” says Gingell. By avoiding attribution to any particular lawyer, the project also emphasises the project’s collaborative nature. And the connection with the next generation is fitting: the spark for the initiative came when Gingell’s then five-year old daughter asked him what a lawyer does. His short answer was that they “help people” – but, when he tried to elaborate, he realised that the profession could do so much more.

Read more: Opinion: The next generation of impact lawyers can steer us towards a sustainable, inclusive economy

“I had this epiphany that we have all this agency as lawyers,” he says, because “clients trust us on what to draft”. His “North star” became using his legal skills to make the world more sustainable.

Chancery Lane Project works because it doesn’t involve campaigning or telling CEOs what to do, the founder believes. “A contract sets obligations and manages risks, and it aligns itself to everyday business. I think that's the magic of it, the simplicity of it: it’s aligned with what you do already. Just a few tweaks can set a relationship on a different path,” he says. 

And if businesses lead the way, he hopes, lawmakers will be more ambitious. “We need some quite transformational legislation… if the economy has shifted towards where that transformation is going to go, then it makes the legislators’ job much easier.”

Floodgates

Chancery Lane Project began with Gingell making every cold call, and working “every evening, every weekend, every family holiday”. By 2020, the “floodgates” had opened: multinationals were knocking on their doors instead. In 2023 it became an independent charity, with philanthropic funding now secured for three years. Funders include the Laudes Foundation, DRK Foundation, Ikea Foundation and ClimateWorks Foundation.

So what’s next? The“doctrine” of climate contracting is now fairly well established, Gingell says, so the charity is focusing on pushing adoption of its clauses. It's also looking to track the emissions reduced through its work (which is challenging, due to corporate confidentiality). And 37 teams of lawyers are working to transpose the clauses for use in different jurisdictions around the world. 

The legal profession is “much maligned, and it doesn't articulate its social value very well,” Gingell says. That may be changing, as initiatives like the Chancery Lane Project build momentum. “This is not about me, in the same way that most law projects get set up. It's about collective good. I want our profession to be one that people love, not despise.”

Corporate lawyer Matt Gingell created Chancery Lane Project in his spare time. It deploys the "magic" of contracting to reduce climate impact.

Corporate lawyer Matt Gingell created Chancery Lane Project in his spare time. It deploys the "magic" of contracting to reduce climate impact.

Lawyers got together in 2019 for a sort of "hackathon" – aiming to draft clauses to be used in existing contracts.

Lawyers got together in 2019 for a sort of "hackathon" – aiming to draft clauses to be used in existing contracts.

Major firms including Salesforce are among those to have used Chancery Lane Project's clauses to future-proof their contracts.

Major firms including Salesforce are among those to have used Chancery Lane Project's clauses to future-proof their contracts.

Gingell pictured with his two children. Chancery Lane Project clauses are each named after a child.

Gingell pictured with his two children. Chancery Lane Project clauses are each named after a child.

New Zealand’s green investment bank has used Chancery Lane Project clauses.

New Zealand’s green investment bank has used Chancery Lane Project clauses.

A brave new era?

A focus on collective good is, some argue, long overdue. Paul Powlesland, who also founded Lawyers for Extinction Rebellion, has pointed out that it was lawyers who found ways to give rights and legal protection to companies – “entirely fictional entities, that we made up” – long before doing the same for “trees, rivers and wildlife, things which actually exist, and which we fundamentally depend on for our own survival”.  No wonder then, he suggests, that nature is suffering so much destruction – “barely a fraction” of what is dedicated to the interests of companies goes towards nature’s interests. 

Read more: The role of law: an emergency service for the 21st century? 

But he believes this can be reversed. “At the root of almost all current ecological crises is fundamentally the idea that nature is a resource to be exploited. English lawyers have had a real hand in creating this idea and we should be at the forefront of imagining how the law can relate to nature differently,” he says.

Many are already itching to achieve things. Emma Montlake runs the Environmental Law Foundation (ELF), a UK charity that helps grassroots communities and nature charities to access free environmental law advice via its network of lawyers and scientists. She reports a recent upsurge among larger city firms wanting to work with ELF, with individual lawyers pushing their firms to work on “interesting pro bono work where nature’s protection is at stake,” she says. ELF also has partnerships with 20 universities, and sees significant interest from student and young lawyers to “do things differently”.

Pro bono work, of course, has long been a feature of the legal profession. A 2022 study of 245 firms around the world found that 61% had at least one staff member in a pro bono role; while staff retention and skills development are among the drivers for giving time for free, 96% of firms cited “desire to help the community” as a reason. Hogan Lovells, for instance, provides over 156,000 hours of pro bono advice per year, and increasingly that’s directed to initiatives focused on innovative ways of tackling climate change and biodiversity loss, according to Yasmin Waljee, international pro bono partner at Hogan Lovells, and also a trustee of the Chancery Lane Project. “Our lawyers are keen to use their skills to support those addressing the climate and ecological crisis,” she says. “Their advice can have a real impact.”

Climate may be front of mind now, but there have been activist lawyers throughout history, Mond Wedd points out, helping drive major changes from women’s rights to the abolition of slavery. “When you see public consciousness forming and saying, ‘Hold on, is this right? Should we be doing this?’, it's usually lawyers, working alongside activists and campaigners, at the forefront of those big movements,” she says. “Laws really are just a system of rules that reflect our moral codes and society. So they're constantly changing and evolving. And lawyers can help with this process, pushing for laws to be changed as public moods shift.”

Neutrality has traditionally been a core principle of legal practice, because it ensures that everyone gets fair representation. But is that still relevant? Trainee lawyers learn about rationality and objectivity,  but climate change has created “unprecedented circumstances”, says Mond Wedd. “I don't think lawyers should be neutral about the crisis we face. But we do need to try and stay within the law. I think history will look back at anyone who was fighting to save the planet in a positive way – in the same way that we look back at the people who helped get women's rights on the agenda.”

As Montlake points out, it would be naive to think that lawyers everywhere are on board. While many are “fighting the good fight”, others spend their time defending some of the world’s biggest polluters. And others fall somewhere in between: many “wonderful people” give time to ELF for free, even while their day job involves working with ethically questionable clients. The wider industry also needs to catch up. While investors measure their “financed emissions” (that is, carbon emissions associated with their financing and investment activities), law firms are not required to factor in “advised emissions” (emissions occurring as a result of their clients’ activities) as part of their carbon footprint, Gingell points out, speaking in a personal capacity.

Taking an ethical stance is, however, becoming more feasible. In 2023, more than 170 UK lawyers declared that they would refuse to prosecute climate protesters or represent new fossil fuel projects. Shortly afterwards, the Law Society issued new guidance saying that solicitors may “decline to advise on matters that are incompatible with the 1.5°C goal”. 

Gingell is somewhat pragmatic about this. While he is “fully behind” any firms that turn down a potential client, divestment won’t solve everything – there will always be someone else willing to take them on. Similarly, individual lawyers wanting to refuse work yet still progress their career will face a “really difficult choice”. 

But, as environmental harm becomes ever more visible, the profession is likely to face increasing pressure. Meanwhile lawyers – whether they’re young graduates, for whom eco-activism is a given, or long-established professionals thinking of their children’s future – will find more opportunities to deploy their skills. Nor can the reality of what’s happening outside be ignored for too much longer, Montlake suggests. Lawyers, after all, “are people who exist in the world”. 

The traditional role of lawyers may be changing amid a climate crisis that threatens humanity's survival.

The traditional role of lawyers may be changing amid a climate crisis that threatens humanity's survival.

So-called "activist" lawyers have been around for centuries, helping drive major changes from women’s rights to the abolition of slavery.

So-called "activist" lawyers have been around for centuries, helping drive major changes from women’s rights to the abolition of slavery.

Brontie Ansell and Paul Powlesland, speaking at the 2023 Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers conference.

Brontie Ansell and Paul Powlesland, speaking at the 2023 Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers conference.

Retail guru Mary Portas (centre) is among the high-profile figures to back the UK's Better Business Act campaign, which aims to change company law.

Retail guru Mary Portas (centre) is among the high-profile figures to back the UK's Better Business Act campaign, which aims to change company law.

The Environmental Law Foundation supported a local community in Isleworth to prevent allotments being taken over by developers.

The Environmental Law Foundation supported a local community in Isleworth to prevent allotments being taken over by developers.

Emma Montlake, who is a joint director of the Environmental Law Foundation, with her dogs, Agnes and Mabel.

Emma Montlake, who is a joint director of the Environmental Law Foundation, with her dogs, Agnes and Mabel.

Six more ways lawyers are fighting for nature

Updating professional guidance in light of the climate emergency

In 2023 the UK Law Society said solicitors may “choose to decline to advise on matters that are incompatible with the 1.5°C goal, or for clients actively working against that goal if it conflicts with your values or your firm’s stated objectives”.  

Joining forces to leverage and share expertise

The Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers (GAIL) is a community of legal leaders who are using the practice of law to have a positive impact on people and the planet, and to accelerate the just transition.

Filling the gap in legal education on climate and biodiversity

Legal Voices for the Future, a collaborative learning forum established by junior lawyers, hosts monthly knowledge sessions and aims to grow the role of a new generation of lawyers. 

Taking legal action against companies and governments

Client Earth works in 60+ countries, to ”use the power of the law to protect the planet”. 

Campaigning to change company law

The UK’s Better Business Act campaign is calling to amend Section 172 of the Companies Act which sets out that the default purpose of companies is to benefit their shareholders.

Creating new legal forms for companies

From the UK’s community interest company, to the USA-born benefit corporation, to France’s entreprise à mission, new legal forms allow CEOs to look beyond profit.

Header image: the Uru-Eu-Wau-Wau indigenous territory of the Amazon rainforest, by Open Planet / Studio Silverback. Other images: Lawyers for Nature; Anna Patton; ufabizphoto/Freepik; James Shook/Wikimedia; Moniruzzaman Sazal / Climate Visuals Countdown (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); Matt Gingell; Salesforce; wirestock/Freepik; disobeyart/Freepik; Pavel Danilyuk/Pexels; Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers; Better Business Act campaign; Emma Montlake/Environmental Law Foundation

This immersive feature was produced by Pioneers Post in partnership with Hogan Lovells and HL BaSE, the firm’s impact economy practice.

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