CCPR/C/135/D/3624/2019
greenhouse gases that gives rise over time to global warming and climate change,6 States
should act with due diligence based on the best science when taking mitigation and adaptation
action. This is an individual responsibility of the State, relative to the risk at stake and its
capacity to address it. A higher standard of due diligence applies in respect of those States
with significant total emissions or very high per capita emissions (whether these are past or
current emissions), given the greater burden that their emissions place on the global climate
system, as well as in respect of States with higher capacities for taking highly ambitious
mitigation action.7 This higher standard applies to the State party in this case.
6.
The Committee has significant practice on article 27 of the Covenant, with much of
its case law concerning the rights of Indigenous Peoples.8 In this case, it has found a violation
because of the State party’s failure to adopt timely adequate adaptation measures to protect
the authors’ right to enjoy their minority culture under article 27. In my view, the Committee
should have linked the State obligation to “protect the authors’ collective ability to maintain
their traditional way of life and to transmit to their children and future generations their
culture and traditions and use of land and sea resources” (para. 8.14 of the Views) more
clearly to mitigation measures, based on national commitments and international cooperation,
as it is mitigation actions which are aimed at addressing the root cause of the problem and
not just remedying the effects. If no effective mitigation actions are taken in a timely manner,
adaptation will eventually become impossible. Such land and sea resources will not be
available for Indigenous Peoples or even for humanity more generally, without diligent
national efforts, as well as joint and concerted mitigation actions of the organized
international community.
7.
Climate change concerns have been addressed over the years by the Committee and
other United Nations human rights treaty bodies,9 the special procedures of the Human Rights
Council10 and more generally by the United Nations.11 This case shows the possibilities and
limitations of human rights-based litigation. That said, alongside other general or specific
institutional arrangements addressing climate change issues, the Committee provides a
suitable venue for addressing some concerns, especially under articles 6, 7, 17 and 27, both
under the Optional Protocol and under article 41 of the Covenant.
6
7
8
9
10
11
24
international law”, European Journal of International Law, vol. 31, No. 1 (February 2020),
(see principles 2, 4, 10, 11 and 14).
Jacqueline Peel, “Climate change”, in The Practice of Shared Responsibility in International Law,
André Nollkaemper and Ilias Plakokefalos, eds. (Cheltenham, Cambridge University Press, 2017),
p. 1031.
Ibid., p. 1035.
For example, William A. Schabas, Nowak’s CCPR Commentary, 3rd revised ed. (Kehl am Rhein,
N.P. Engel, 2019), pp. 809–812.
Teitiota v. New Zealand, E/C.12/2018/1 and HRI/2019/1. See also M.K.A.H. v. Switzerland
(CRC/C/88/D/95/2019), Sacchi et al. v. Argentina (CRC/C/88/D/104/2019), Sacchi et al. v. Brazil
(CRC/C/88/D/105/2019), Sacchi et al. v. France (CRC/C/88/D/106/2019), Sacchi et al. v. Germany
(CRC/C/88/D/107/2019) and Sacchi et al. v. Turkey (CRC/C/88/D/108/2019).
See A/70/287, A/74/161, A/HRC/40/55, A/HRC/41/39, A/HRC/43/53 and Human Rights Council
resolution 48/14.
See www.un.org/en/climatechange. See also A/HRC/50/57.