Introduction by Croakey: The world’s governments are spending more on fossil fuels subsidies than they do on education, according to calculations by the International Monetary Fund.
“We estimate that scrapping explicit and implicit fossil-fuel subsidies would prevent 1.6 million premature deaths annually, raise government revenues by $4.4 trillion, and put emissions on track toward reaching global warming targets. It would also redistribute income as fuel subsidies benefit rich households more than poor ones,” wrote IMF staffers recently.
Meanwhile, the United Nations has produced another lever for encouraging governments to abandon fossil fuel subsidies.
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has produced a new 20-page statement on children’s rights and the environment, with a special focus on climate change.
Below, Dr Noam Peleg, a Senior Lecturer at UNSW’s Faculty of Law and Justice, explains the significance of this development in an article first published at The Conversation, under the headline, ‘Climate change threatens the rights of children. The UN just outlined the obligations states have to protect them’.
Beneath the article are tweets and links to other climate-related news.
Noam Peleg writes:
Climate change is not just an environmental crisis, it’s a human rights crisis. And the humans to be most affected by climate catastrophe are the youngest ones: children.
We have seen children directly impacted in the Northern Hemisphere’s unprecedented heatwaves this year. In Greece, 1,200 children were evacuated when a wildfire threatened their holiday camps.
In the United States, children were swept away by floodwaters in Kentucky after torrential rain, while an extreme heatwave swamped the West Coast.
In Australia, this summer is expected to be hot, dry and dangerous but that’s nothing compared to what is to come.
So what are the responsibilities of governments to reduce the harm climate change will wreak on the lives of children?
A statement from the United Nations (UN) released on 28 August seeks to clarify this.
It clearly stipulates why and how the rights of children are compromised by climate change – including the very basic right to life. It also details the steps necessary to mitigate this catastrophe.
A practical guide to help children
The statement comes from a UN body of 18 experts that monitors how national governments are implementing the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. This is an international agreement on a broad range of human rights as they relate to children, including their health, education, development, best interests and living standards.
From time to time, UN human rights committees publish a new interpretation of the treaty they oversee. These are known as “general comments”.
General comments are significant because they provide authoritative guidance to the governments of the 196 countries that have ratified the convention, with Australia being one of them. They also provide a globally agreed standard against which governments and businesses can be assessed.
This new comment follows nearly two years of consultation with more than 7,000 children from 103 countries, as well as governments and relevant experts.
It’s not merely an aspirational statement. Rather, it’s a practical “how-to” guide to action. This document will help children, young people and their advocates hold governments and others accountable for their decisions.
What does the document say?
The general comment says governments have obligations to respect, protect and fulfil children’s rights. It states the “adverse effects of climate change” on the enjoyment of children’s rights “give rise to obligations of states to take actions to protect against those effects”. It adds the committee overseeing the convention aims to:
- Emphasise the urgent need to address the adverse effects of environmental harm and climate change on children;
- Promote a holistic understanding of children’s rights as they apply to environmental protection;
- Clarify the obligations of States parties to the Convention and provide authoritative guidance on legislative, administrative and other appropriate measures to be undertaken with respect to environmental issues, with a special focus on climate change.
The general comment also identifies children as agents in their own lives. By extension, this means children have a right to participate in the drafting of environmental policies or laws that will affect them.
Here are the committee’s points that are most relevant to Australia.
1. Best interests of the child
A key principle of the treaty is the best interests of the child should be a primary consideration when making decisions on their behalf. These decisions include laws, regulations, budgets and international agreements.
The general comment expands on this, saying:
the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration in the adoption and implementation of environmental decisions affecting children.”
It says this process should take into account “the specific circumstances that make children uniquely vulnerable in the environmental context”.
This “best interests” approach stands in stark contrast to that taken by the full bench of the Federal Court in Australia.
In 2022, the court accepted the Federal Government’s argument that it has no duty of care for children, and that the best interests principle is not something it ought to consider when making decisions about the environment.
2. Protecting Indigenous children
Indigenous children and their communities are particularly vulnerable to climate change.
For example, a recent study found Indigenous communities in New South Wales were disproportionately exposed to a range of climate extremes such as heat, drought and flooding. They also experienced higher rates of climate-sensitive health conditions and socioeconomic disadvantages.
The comment says states are obliged to ensure the right to life, survival and development of Indigenous children. They are also expected to “engage with Indigenous children and their families in responding to climate change by integrating, as appropriate, Indigenous cultures and knowledge in mitigation and adaptation measures”.
In Australia, it means the state, territory and federal governments have the duty to listen to Indigenous communities – especially to their younger members – and to take their perspective into account when crafting any policy or law that might have an impact on their livelihood and culture.
3. Actions of the business sector
The general comment says governments should require businesses to conduct “due diligence” to assess how their current and future actions might affect the climate and the rights of children.
Where the impacts of a business cross national boundaries, governments are expected to ensure businesses operate at “environmental standards aimed at protecting children’s rights from climate-related harm”.
The comment also expects governments to encourage investment in and use of zero-carbon technologies, particularly when the assets are publicly owned or funded.
Governments should also protect the rights of children when implementing tax regimes and procuring goods and services from the private sector.
Facing up to the challenge
The general comment makes it clear states should no longer ignore the impacts of the climate crisis on children and future generations because they have legal duties to rectify it.
The UN committee articulates the responsibilities of states and details how children’s rights should be protected by all levels of government. Despite the fact the Convention on the Rights of the Child was adopted decades before environmental rights became a topic of discussion, the new general comment is a good reference for everyone from on-the-ground, grassroots local advocacy groups to international non-government organisations and UN organisations like UNICEF.
In this bold new statement, the committee has pushed the interpretation of the convention almost to the maximum, and like other international treaties, the real test will be in its implementation.
Dr Noam Peleg is a Senior Lecturer at UNSW’s Faculty of Law and Justice, and an Associate at the Australian Human Rights Institute. His work focuses on international children’s rights law and its intersection with human rights law, childhood studies, and child development. He is the author of ‘The Child’s Right to Development’, which was published by Cambridge University Press in 2019.
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