A/HRC/48/78
B.
Summary of deliberations
25.
During the thematic session, the Working Group discussed human rights approaches
to environmental injustice, racial disparities, unequal protection and the unique impact of the
climate crisis and environmental racism on people of African descent. The session comprised
three panel discussions.
1.
Environmental racism: Earth, wind and fire (and water)
26.
In her introductory remarks, the Chair of the Working Group stressed the importance
of centring people of African descent in order to recognize the racial dimension of the climate
crisis. Race was used to normalize exploitation and disregard, opening opportunities to
generate profit at the expense of people’s lives, resources and lands. The Chair recalled the
opening screening of “Mossville: When Great Trees Fall” and the discussion thereon coorganized with the Mossville team, and thanked it for making such an important
documentary, which showed the deadly cost of environmental racism. Other climate justice
experts would take the floor during the session and examine how systemic racism and the
environment and climate crisis were affecting people of African descent.
27.
Rosamund Kissi-Debrah, World Health Organization advocate for health and air
quality and co-founder of the Ella Roberta Family Foundation, spoke about her 9-year-old
daughter, Ella, who died in 2013 from a severe form of asthma. Ella was the first person in
the United Kingdom to have air pollution listed as a cause of death on her death certificate.
A second coroner’s inquest into Ella’s death, in a landmark decision in December 2020,
found that air pollution had been a significant contributory factor to both the induction and
exacerbations of her asthma. Between 2010 and 2013, Ella was exposed to levels of nitrogen
dioxide and particulate matter (mainly from traffic emissions) in excess of World Health
Organization guidelines. Even though the failure to reduce the level of nitrogen dioxide to
limits set by the European Union and domestic law was recognized as a cause of her death,
Ella’s mother was not informed by health professionals of the health risks posed by air
pollution and its potential to exacerbate asthma, or of steps that might have prevented Ella’s
death. There was no dispute at the inquest that atmospheric air pollution was the cause of
many thousands of premature deaths every year in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland. Delays in reducing the levels of atmospheric air pollution caused avoidable
deaths.9 Ella’s mother was campaigning to create “Ella’s law”, which would replace outdated
clean air legislation. The twenty-sixth session of the Conference of the Parties (see para. 23
above) was an opportunity to ask leaders what they were doing to protect the right to clean
air, to advocate for and demand monitoring of air quality, to educate and raise the awareness
of those most at risk, and to ensure that waste was not simply dumped in people’s backyards.
28.
Dr. Angelique Walker-Smith, National Senior Associate for Pan African and
Orthodox Church Engagement at Bread for the World, discussed the lack of environmental
justice in the climate crisis and how it affected the people of Africa and people of African
descent around the world. She referred to Flint, Michigan, in the United States of America, a
community affected for years by toxic water because of government negligence and disregard
for Black and brown lives. In 2014, the town decided to switch its drinking water supply from
a municipal water system to a local river in order to save money. Inadequate treatment and
testing resulted in major water quality and health issues for Flint residents. Grievances were
systematically ignored and even dismissed by government officials, despite reports for 18
months of the odour, discoloration and bad taste of the water, as well as skin irritation and
hair loss. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission had concluded that the poor governmental
response to the Flint crisis was the result of systemic racism. Dr. Walker-Smith pointed out
that African Americans were five times as likely as other people to live in areas of
concentrated poverty, which were more exposed to climate shocks and lacked community
amenities that could mitigate the effects of climate change, such as trees that help to clean
the air and to cool neighbourhoods during heatwaves. The historic reality of colonialism and
structural racism had designed systems that lived on today through environmental racism and
a myriad of other injustices that had grown out of the same evil roots. Global protests for
9
6
See www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Ella-Kissi-Debrah-2021-0113-1.pdf.