JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) 鈥 Indonesians are trying to stop a major German cement producer from building a mine and factory under a unique supply chain law that adds to a growing number of cases legal experts say may influence European businesses in Asia.
Critics say Heidelberg Materials, one of the world鈥檚 largest cement companies, failed to properly assess and mitigate the potential harms of its plans to create a limestone mine and cement factory in Central Java鈥檚 Kendeng Mountains. They say the project may damage a rare karst ecosystem and harm the livelihoods of Indigenous people in the area.
鈥淚f the project is implemented, we face an ecological catastrophe, impoverishment, and violations of our human rights,鈥 said Bambang Sutikyo, one of the complainants.
Katharina Plonsker, the senior sustainability communication manager for Heidelberg Materials, said affected communities had the opportunity to voice concerns to the company’s local subsidiary PT Indocement Tunggal Prakarsa during the project’s permitting process. Feedback from this exchange was reflected in the project planning.
So far, 鈥渘o decision on the implementation of the project has been taken,鈥 she said.
The complaint to the German Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control against Heidelberg Materials and Indocement is Indonesia’s first to employ , which is designed to ensure that human rights are respected throughout the supply chains of big companies.
Some other European Union nations are preparing to implement similar regulations, learning from Germany as they draft their own versions of the law, said Annabell Br眉ggemann with the Berlin-based European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights. So, 鈥渃omplaints filed at this moment are quite significant,” she said.
In similar cases, plaintiffs in Cambodia, Pakistan, the Philippines and elsewhere in Indonesia are taking other major European firms 鈥 like the apparel company Adidas and energy giant Shell 鈥 to court.
This adds to financial risks for European companies that may have invested in Asia to take advantage of less stringent regulations, according to Jameela Joy Reyes with the London-based Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment.
鈥淭he transboundary harm element of these cases is quite interesting, and we might be seeing that more in the future,” she said.
Indonesians take German cement giant to court
The complaint by 10 people backed by local and international non-profits, like Inclusive Development and Watch Indonesia, alleges that Heidelberg Materials did not fully assess the potential harm to the affected area in Central Java’s Kendeng Mountains, a major natural carbon sink and underground reservoir.
Other mining plans in Kendeng have .
“It鈥檚 not just the environmental impact, the loss of land taken by the cement industry will result in our brothers and sisters having no land left,” said Gunretno, one of the plaintiffs. He belongs to the Indigenous agricultural community, the Samin, also known as the Sedulur Sikep. Like many Indonesians, he uses only one name.
鈥淲hen it comes to environmental destruction of any kind, we, as global citizens, have a responsibility to figure out how we can work together to protect our one and only Earth,鈥 Gunretno said.
Syamsuddin Arief, a lawyer with the Semarang Legal Aid Institute, which supports the Samin, hopes the complaint will 鈥渁chieve the shared goal of upholding citizens鈥 rights to a sustainable life, a healthy and good environment, and ensuring the sustainability of the Kendeng Mountains.鈥
Climate cases increase in Asia
Globally, there were at least 226 lawsuits over climate issues filed in 2024, according to the Grantham Research Institute, which tracks nearly 3,000 cases across 60 countries.
Four fisher people from Indonesia鈥檚 Pari Island filed a legal complaint in 2023 against the Swiss construction company Holcim, which refutes their assertion that its climate change-causing emissions threaten their homes and livelihoods.
Holcim said it plans to appeal a Swiss court’s decision to hear the case. If it proceeds, this would be one of the first climate litigation cases against a Swiss corporation.
Nearly 70 survivors of a 2021 used a similar in a complaint filed last year against Shell. The plaintiffs say the company’s historic emissions made the disaster worse and are seeking compensation for deaths and damages. Shell says it’s not legally liable.
Around 40 farmers in Pakistan also filed a legal complaint against Heidelberg Materials and German energy giant RWE last year. They likewise contend that those companies’ emissions worsened climate change, intensifying , the worst in Pakistan’s history at the time.
This move was inspired by a parallel .
鈥淎ll of these factors are coming into play in this bigger conversation about reparations and what this might mean for those in the Global South, whose land and whose resources many of these corporations have been profiting off of,鈥 said Reyes at the institute.
Initial cases may influence EU laws
Germany鈥檚 supply chain law has changed how communities in affected environments around the world can counter corporate activity, said Laurie Parsons of the Royal Holloway, University of London and author of 鈥淐arbon Colonialism.鈥
鈥淚t also changed the mindsets of companies and governments about what鈥檚 possible,鈥 he said.
With regulations similar to Germany’s expected across the 27-nation EU by 2028, more cases are inevitable, said Br眉ggemann with the ECCHR.
The Indonesian cement project case 鈥渟hows how strong the movement is for corporate accountability and how big the need is for regulation of the globalized economy,鈥 she said.
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Delgado reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writer in Brussels contributed to this report.
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