CRC/C/88/D/104/2019
Issues and proceedings before the Committee
Consideration of admissibility
10.1 Before considering any claim contained in a communication, the Committee must
decide, in accordance with rule 20 of its rules of procedure under the Optional Protocol,
whether the claim is admissible under the Optional Protocol.
Jurisdiction
10.2 The Committee notes the State party’s submission that the communication is
inadmissible for lack of jurisdiction. The Committee also notes the authors’ argument that
they are within the State party’s jurisdiction as victims of the foreseeable consequences of
the State party’s domestic and cross-border contributions to climate change and the carbon
pollution knowingly emitted, permitted or promoted by the State party from within its
territory. The Committee further notes the authors’ claims that the State party’s acts and
omissions perpetuating the climate crisis have already exposed them throughout their
childhoods to the foreseeable, life-threatening risks of climate change caused by humans.
10.3 Under article 2 (1) of the Convention, States parties have the obligation to respect and
ensure the rights of “each child within their jurisdiction”. Under article 5 (1) of the Optional
Protocol, the Committee may receive and consider communications submitted by or on
behalf of an individual or group of individuals, within the jurisdiction of a State party,
claiming to be victims of a violation by that State party of any of the rights set forth in the
Convention. The Committee observes that, while neither the Convention nor the Optional
Protocol makes any reference to the term “territory” in its application of jurisdiction,
extraterritorial jurisdiction should be interpreted restrictively. 14
10.4 The Committee notes the relevant jurisprudence of the Human Rights Committee and
the European Court of Human Rights referring to extraterritorial jurisdiction. 15 Nevertheless,
that jurisprudence was developed and applied to factual situations that are very different to
the facts and circumstance of this case. The authors’ communication raises novel
jurisdictional issues of transboundary harm related to climate change.
10.5 The Committee also notes Advisory Opinion OC-23/17 of the Inter-American Court
of Human Rights on the environment and human rights, which is of particular relevance to
the issue of jurisdiction in the present case as it clarified the scope of extraterritorial
jurisdiction in relation to environmental protection. In that opinion, the Court noted that,
when transboundary damage occurs that affects treaty-based rights, it is understood that the
persons whose rights have been violated are under the jurisdiction of the State of origin if
there is a causal link between the act that originated in its territory and the infringement of
the human rights of persons outside its territory (para. 101). The exercise of jurisdiction arises
when the State of origin exercises effective control over the activities that caused the damage
and consequent human rights violation (para. 104 (h)). In cases of transboundary damage,
the exercise of jurisdiction by a State of origin is based on the understanding that it is the
State in whose territory or under whose jurisdiction the activities were carried out that has
the effective control over them and is in a position to prevent them from causing
transboundary harm that impacts the enjoyment of human rights of persons outside its
territory. The potential victims of the negative consequences of such activities are under the
jurisdiction of the State of origin for the purposes of the possible responsibility of that State
for failing to comply with its obligation to prevent transboundary damage (para. 102). The
14
15
10
See, inter alia, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Advisory Opinion OC-23/17, para. 81, and
European Court of Human Rights, Catan and others v. Moldova and Russia, Applications Nos.
43370/04, 8252/05 and 18454/06, Judgment of 19 October 2012.
See, inter alia, Human Rights Committee, general comments No. 31 (2004), para. 10, and No. 36
(2018), para. 63, Munaf v. Romania (CCPR/C/96/D/1539/2006), para. 14.2, A.S. et al. v. Malta
(CCPR/C/128/D/3043/2017), paras. 6.3–6.5, A.S. et al. v. Italy (CCPR/C/130/D/3042/2017), paras.
7.3–7.5; European Court of Human Rights, Andreou v. Turkey, Application No. 45653/99, Judgment
of 27 October 2009, para. 25, and Georgia v. Russia (II), Application No. 38263/08, Judgment of 21
January 2021, para. 81. See also Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment No. 16
(2013), para. 39, and CRC/C/NOR/CO/5-6, para. 27.