Canada Accused of Using Paris Agreement to Shield Itself from Accountability at World’s Top Court.
Vanuatu attorney general Arnold Loughman told the court major emitters have destabilized the climate system and caused catastrophic harm through the burning of fossil fuels——and that countries have done this despite existing obligations to prevent significant harm to the environment, to protect human rights, and to respect countries’ self-determination.
“In a system intended to uphold peace and security, self-determination, the enjoyment of fundamental rights and the protection of the environment, how can the conduct that has taken humanity to the brink of catastrophe, threatening the survival of entire peoples, be lawful and without consequences?” he argued.
Vanuatu officials are clear that the country wants to see the ICJ recognize that causing the climate crisis is unlawful, it must end, and harms must be fairly addressed.
Addressing those harms is “really getting down to the brass tacks,” Boyd said. In international law, if a state violates its international obligations, it owes compensation to those it harmed.
“It’s a form of liability that could be imposed on countries like Canada, which is what we’re afraid of,” he said. “The bill for reparations is going to be a lot bigger than the [voluntary measures].”
International laws can be used to adjudicate problems between countries, and lead to fines and reparations. Some of the core principles at play in the current case actually originated from a dispute between Canada and the US. In the Trail Smelter dispute, the US took Canada to the International Joint Commission over pollution from a zinc and lead smelter that it said was violating its sovereignty by impacting farmers. In its decision in 1941, the tribunal ordered reparations be paid to affected farmers, and established the concept of transboundary harm, and the polluter pays principle, as a way to ensure countries maintain sovereignty from threats outside their border. Now, Canada and the US are arguing together against the application of those concepts.
During the climate hearings, a “peoples’ petition” was submitted to the court by a coalition of youth groups including the Pacific Island Students Fighting Climate Change, World Youth for Climate Justice, and Future Generations Tribunal. The petition includes testimony from people in Global South countries describing how climate impacts are undermining health, safety and economic security, and contributing to the loss of culture, language, ways of life, and more.
Lilly Teafa, an Indigenous woman from Tuvalu, said she’s witnessed increasingly intense and frequent cyclones that devastate her nation of nine low-lying coral atolls. Nine years ago during Cyclone Pam, her home island was devastated with the storm tearing families apart and destroying houses, she said.
“The emotional trauma of seeing my young cousin clinging to her mother’s remains and hearing the cries of a mother searching for her son’s body in the ocean (moana) still haunts me,” she said. “We need support for adaptation and outreach programs to help us maintain our statehood and identity.”
Beyond vicious storms, Purbayan Chakraborty, a lawyer from West Bengal, India, described how erratic rainfall, droughts, rising temperatures, and soil degradation has led to a crisis in the local tea industry. She said workers had already been trapped in “exploitative cycles of poverty” that have only been exacerbated due to climate change, pointing to specific impacts on women, who are often denied maternity leave, with employers citing the poor state of the tea industry as a justification to deny those labour protections.
Climate change is also fuelling a migration crisis, said Gerardo Aguilar, a coordinator with the Asociación por el Desarrollo de la Península de Zacate Grande (Association for the Development of the Zacate Grande Peninsula) in Honduras. He said in his community there used to be two harvesting seasons, but in the past five years it has become impossible to carry out a spring harvest. Droughts have led to a “death” of watermelon crops and led to a decline of shrimp harvesting.
“Nobody needed to go to another country to make money and we lived happily,” he said. “Ever since the watermelon and shrimp seasons have disappeared, many people have had to leave my community to make a living elsewhere.”
Vanuatu has long been at the forefront of international climate leadership. Beyond spearheading this month’s ICJ hearings, borne out of classroom discussions, it was also the first country to endorse a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty to strengthen global efforts to address global temperature spiralling out of control.
In an interview with Canada’s National Observer last year at the UN climate summit in Dubai, Regenvanu said increasingly petrostates, like Canada, are viewed as “rogue states.”
“The message from the Pacific small island developing states…is that Canada has to immediately stop any further expansion of fossil fuel production,” he said at the time. “It has to do that now if it’s going to be faithful to the science. We all know that.”
A study from Oil Change International published last year found Canada is on track to be the second-largest fossil fuel expander, behind only the US, by 2050. On its own, Canada’s planned fossil fuel expansion represents 10% of the world’s expansion plans, creating the equivalent greenhouse gas emissions of 117 coal plants run for decades.
The ICJ is expected to release its decision in 2025.