⚖️🌐Continuing today: historic #ClimateJustice public hearings at 🏦International Tribunal on Law of the Sea where Small Islands States' representatives are laying arguments for a strong Advisory Opinion #ITLOSAO
📝I am reporting on today's hearings in 🧵below👇
2/ Context: this is 2nd day of pleading here in Hamburg 🇩🇪: representatives of Small Islands States / @COSIS_ccil are now presenting legal arguments related to the questions before the tribunal. 34 States and 4 international organisations will then plead over following 2 weeks
@cosis_ccil 3/Yesterday AM, Small Islands States officials opened the hearings with powerful testimonies addressing need/urgency for this #ITLOSAO after decades of inadequate climate action under #UN climate agreeements, stressing importance of oceans for their people
@cosis_ccil 4/ #ITLOSAO then @COSIS_ccil reps presented key scientific facts re: climate impacts-current & foreseen-on Islands States & legal basis in UNCLOS (UN Convention on Law of Sea) for dynamic interpretation of States' duties on basis of latest scientific data
@cosis_ccil 5/ Prof @Brian_K_McGarry at @ITLOSAO addresses whether the tribunal is competent to address the questions before it: an advisory opinion of the @ITLOS_TIDM on matters related to States responsibility under UNCLOS is not only possible, it is necessary
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM 6/ Prof @Brian_K_McGarry at @ITLOSAO: both requirements for an advisory opinion are met
1⃣the tribunal has jurisdiction (it has the relevant mandate through the COSIS agreement & the question relates to a legal matter)
2⃣the request is admissible
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM 7/ Prof @Brian_K_McGarry at @ITLOSAO rejects the 3 arguments used by some other States questioning admissibility:
🔸the Qs related to *existing* legal obligations
🔹the Qs are not unreasonably broad
🔸Small Islands States are entitled to request this AO through @COSIS_ccil
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM 8/ Prof. @JuttaBrunnee presentation at #ITLOSAO now addresses the core of the questions before the @ITLOS_TIDM: what is the scope of States' obligations in context of climate change, defining due diligence under international law
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM @JuttaBrunnee 9/ Prof. @JuttaBrunnee at #ITLOSAO: stringency of due diligence obligations is determined by degree of risk, foreseeability & severity of potential harm, referring to Int' Law Commssion's Draft articles on Prevention of Transboundary Harm
📄 legal.un.org/ilc/texts/inst…
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM @JuttaBrunnee 10/ Prof. @JuttaBrunnee at #ITLOSAO: UNCLOS' obligation of due diligence for States to do the utmost to prevent harm must be understood in the context of the goal of protecting & preserving the marine environment, which is essential, including for generations unborn
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM @JuttaBrunnee 11/ Now speaking at #ITLOSAO: Prof @JMThouvenin, delivering a brilliant legal analysis of the scope of the legal obligations of States under article 194 of the UNCLOS which provides a key legal basis with regards to pollution prevention
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM @JuttaBrunnee @JMThouvenin 12/Prof @JMThouvenin at #ITLOSAO reviews thoroughly terms & meaning of UNCLOS' key para. to define the conduct of States that is legally required under law of the sea to prevent environmental harm (note the strength of the wording of this article: "all measures", "all sources")
@cosis_ccil @Brian_K_McGarry @ITLOS_TIDM @JuttaBrunnee @JMThouvenin 13/ @JMThouvenin presentation at #ITLOSAO is really where rubber hits the road: the legal obligations of States to take *all* measures necessary to prevent (climate-related) damage to marine environment are more clearly laid out in UNCLOS than many States would like to recognize
14/ after a short break at #ITLOSAO, Catherine Amirfar now addresses how the best available climate science must inform the interpretation of States' duties under the law of the sea, stressing the scientific consensus regarding the need to avoid exceeding 1.5c of warming
15/ Catherine Amirfar lays out clear case at #ITLOSAO for the need to interpret the duty to protect the marine environment as requiring States to take all measures necessary to/do the utmost to limit global average temp. increase to 1.5c
16/ ‼️Catherine Amirfar at #ITLOSAO: States can communicate and implement NDCs under the #ParisAgreement while failing to discharge their obligations under the environmental provisions of UNCLOS if the level of ambition is not sufficient to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems
17/Catherine Amirfar at #ITLOSAO: science informs what is objectively required to fulfil obligations under UNCLOS - incl. by taking into account responsibility and capabilities, thus requiring most wealthy/most emitting States to do more
18/ Catherine Amirfar at #ITLOSAO now lays out the scope of the obligations under UNCLOS with regards to Greenhouse Gas Emissions.
📸The importance of this presentation is made clear by the number of attendees of the hearings taking pictures of these slides.
19/ Prof. Philippa Webb now addressing #ITLOS in relation to the second question before the tribunal regarding the duty to protect and preserve the marine environment in relation to climate change impacts, including ocean warming and sea level rise, and ocean acidification.
20/ Prof. Philippa Webb at #ITLOSAO: issuing and implementing a NDC is neither a floor nor a ceiling when States discharge their duties to protect the marine environment - NDCs might actually be irrelevant to the fulfilment of States' environmental obligations under UNCLOS
21/ P. Webb at #ITLOSAO: Art 192 requires states to protect the marine environment to enable it to serve as a sink & prevent further harm such as through ocean acidification
⚠️it excludes measures that would exacerbate ocean acidification such as through ocean fertilization
22/ #ITLOSAO public hearings concluded for this morning & will resume at 3pm CEST, here is the program for the afternoon: @COSIS_ccil representatives will conclude their pleading in this historic #ClimateJustice advisory proceedings
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🚨 On day 1 of #COP29, 🇦🇿AZ Presidency seeks to speed up the endorsement of new standards on carbon markets. This is extremely alarming. If this moves forward, it would be a real cop-out by governmental delegations gathered in Baku.
An explanatory thread 🧵⬇️
2/🌰 𝐈𝐧 𝐚 𝐧𝐮𝐭𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐥𝐥: Weeks before #COP29, a technical body (the Article 6.4 Supervisory Body) pushed through 2 standards to operationalize & expand carbon markets, circumventing governmental authority + stepping out of its mandate.
🔗🇺🇳UN Doc: unfccc.int/documents/6426…
3/ ⚠️These standards also threaten the integrity of the Paris Agreement. The COP can either reject this approach or give it a green light. The latter would undermine the implementation of the Paris Agreement and create a dangerous precedent for future decision-making.
⚡️🚨⚖️ Starting in 10mins: historic moment on the path to #ClimateJustice: the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea 🧑⚖️🌊 will deliver the first international legal opinion spelling out States' legal obligations in the context of climate change #ITLOSAO
🧵A live thread ⬇️
2/🥜the context in a nutshell: after a robust drafting process informed by the input of 30+ States and many legal experts, the 21 Judges of the🧑⚖️ @ITLOS_TIDM will deliver today their advisory opinion in response to a request by Small Islands States gathered in the @COSIS_CCIL
3/🧑⚖️ This is the first out of three Advisory Opinions (authoritative legal statements) that international tribunals have been asked to deliver to clarify the extent of the existing legal obligations of States, under international law, related to combating climate change.
⚡️⚖️a few snapshots from the landmark #ClimateJustice decision delivered today by the 🇪🇺European Court of Human Rights in Klimaseniorinnen v. 🇨🇭Switzerland
🧵a short thread focusing on the scope of substantive obligations of States...⬇️
🆕🇪🇺while the European Court has a long track record of protecting environmental rights, today provided the first opportunity for the Court to consider the scope of States' existing obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights in the context of climate change...
... in fact this was the first case to be heard by an international human rights court on matters related to human rights and climate change.
Three cases have already been adjudicated by 🇺🇳UN human rights monitoring bodies but those are not judicial institutions.
🔥📢historic #ClimateJustice decisions upcoming today at European Court of #HumanRights
⚖️Today's decisions could shape #ClimateAction policies in all 46 🇪🇺European States & beyond
🧵A live thread on key stakes & takeaways from the Court's hearing taking place in Strasbourg⬇️
2/ Context: the ⚖️@ECHR_CEDH will deliver historic rulings in 3⃣ of the 9 climate cases currently pending before the Court.
🗺️These rulings are expected to serve as a blueprint for future decisions regarding the obligations of 46 European States with regards to climate action
@ECHR_CEDH 3/ today's cases
👵Verein Klimaseniorinnen v. Switzerland 🇨🇭
🚸Duarte Agostinho v. Portugal 🇵🇹& 31 other States
🌊Carême v. France 🇫🇷
But by addressing #HumanRights obligations of States re: climate emergency, the significance of these decisions go way beyond individual cases
⚡️⚖️🇺🇳starting now: diplomatic briefing on the submissions to the @CIJ_ICJ in the advisory proceedings related to States obligations in the context of climate change, hosted by 🇻🇺Vanuatu, 🇨🇷Costa Rica,🇵🇹Portugal & @CIEL_tweets
🧵key messages in thread below ⬇️
#ICJAO4Climate
2/ #ICJAO4Climate submissions briefing:
🎙️@joie_chowdhury of @CIEL_tweets opens the panel stressing the historic opportunity offered by these Advisory Proceedings but also the importance of written submissions to inform the work of the International Court of Justice 📝
@joie_chowdhury @ciel_tweets 3/ Amb. @Sumbuea of 🇻🇺Vanuatu stresses key role played by Pacific youth in initiating this groundbreaking initiative, reminds other diplomats of the importance of written submissions by March 22nd, emphasising importance of participation by States from all regions of the world
🔥A hot take on #COP28:
The #FossilFuels industry tried every trick to protect its interest:
📍hosting COP in a repressive country to tame dissent
🎩placing one of its CEO in charge of COP
🤑sending thousands of lobbyists
😡coordinating a last ditch defence through @OPEC
A🧵⬇️
2/ yet, even in this most favourable environment, the #FossilFuels industry & its governmental backers failed to prevent what people and most impacted countries demanded: a recognition of need to transition away from fossil fuels. There will be no turning back from here.
3/ But yes: the #COP28 outcome is appalling as #fossilfuels cheerleaders secured so many loopholes - intent on using these to justify their planet-wrecking plans for a continued expansion of fossil fuels extraction...