Top UN court to open unprecedented climate hearings
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The Peace Palace, the seat of the International Court of Justice, in The Hague on May 17.
PHOTO: AFP
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THE HAGUE, Netherlands – The world’s top court will next week start unprecedented hearings aimed at finding a “legal blueprint” for how countries should protect the environment from damaging greenhouse gases – and what the consequences are if they do not.
From Dec 2, lawyers and representatives from more than 100 countries and organisations will make submissions before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague – the highest number ever.
Activists hope the legal opinion from the ICJ judges will have far-reaching consequences in the fight against climate change.
But others fear the UN-backed request for a non-binding advisory opinion will have limited impact – and it could take the UN’s top court months, or even years, to deliver.
The hearings at the Peace Palace come days after a bitterly negotiated climate deal at the COP29 summit in Azerbaijan, which said developed countries must provide at least US$300 billion (S$402 billion) a year by 2035 for climate finance.
Poorer countries have slammed the pledge from wealthy polluters as insultingly low and the final deal failed to mention a global pledge to move away from planet-heating fossil fuels.
‘No distant threat’
The UN General Assembly in 2023 adopted a resolution in which it referred two key questions to the ICJ judges.
First, what obligations did states have under international law to protect the earth’s climate system from greenhouse gas emissions?
Second, what are the legal consequences under these obligations, where states, “by their acts and omissions, have caused significant harm to the climate system and other parts of the environment?”
The second question was also linked to the legal responsibilities of states for harm caused to small, more vulnerable countries and their populations.
This applied especially to countries under threat from rising sea levels and harsher weather patterns in places including the Pacific Ocean.
“Climate change for us is not a distant threat,” said Mr Vishal Prasad, director of the Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change group.
“It is reshaping our lives right now. Our islands are at risk. Our communities face disruptive change at a rate and scale that generations before us have not known,” Mr Prasad told journalists a few days before the start of the hearings.
Launching a campaign in 2019 to bring the climate issue to the ICJ, Mr Prasad’s group of 27 students spearheaded consensus among Pacific island nations including his own native Fiji, before it was taken to the UN.
In 2023, the General Assembly unanimously adopted the resolution to ask the ICJ for an advisory opinion.
‘Legal blueprint’
Ms Joie Chowdhury, a senior lawyer at the US and Swiss-based Centre for International Environmental Law, said climate advocates did not expect the ICJ’s opinion “to provide very specific answers”.
Instead, she predicted the court would provide “a legal blueprint in a way, on which more specific questions can be decided,” she said.
The judges’ opinion, which she expected sometime in 2025, “will inform climate litigation on domestic, national and international levels.”
“One of the questions that is really important, as all of the legal questions hinge on it, is what is the conduct that is unlawful,” said Ms Chowdhury.
“That is very central to these proceedings,” she added.
Some of the world’s largest carbon polluters – including the world’s top three greenhouse gas emitters, China, the United States and India – will be among some 98 countries and 12 organisations and groups expected to make submissions.
On Dec 2, proceedings will open with a statement from Vanuatu and the Melanesian Spearhead Group which also represents the vulnerable island states of Fiji, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands as well as Indonesia and East Timor.
At the end of the two-week hearings, organisations including the European Union and the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries are to give their statements.
“With this advisory opinion, we are not only here to talk about what we fear losing,” Mr Prasad said.
“We’re here to talk about what we can protect and what we can build if we stand together,” he added. AFP

