CCPR/C/135/D/3624/2019
party can offer protection.26 The alleged threat to the authors’ rights is a global phenomenon
arising from myriad acts committed by innumerable private and State entities over decades
which, unquestionably, are beyond the jurisdiction and control of the State party. It would be
perverse if, to ensure that climate change does not impair the authors’ rights, the Covenant
were to impose a duty or obligation on the State party that the State party could not hope to
fulfil. Moreover, the authors acknowledge the multiplicity of global causes of climate change,
and that there is still the opportunity for mitigating factors at the national and global levels
to intervene in order to allay the threat posed by its future impacts.
6.8
Any positive obligation that arises under the Covenant is limited principally to the
threat posed by the acts of private persons or entities within a State party’s jurisdiction and
control. This could also extend to positive obligations in respect of environmental issues that
pose a direct, specific and objective threat to the enjoyment of Covenant rights, such as the
use of pesticides (as in Portillo Cáceres et al. v. Paraguay), where it is within the scope of a
State’s power to avert that risk. It does not, however, create an obligation to protect generally
against the future effects of climate change, which, as a matter of international law, extend
well beyond the scope of a single State party’s jurisdiction and control.
6.9
Academic scholars have noted that “causal pathways involving anthropogenic climate
change, and especially its impacts, are intricate and diffuse” and that human rights law
“cannot actually address the depth and breadth of the causes and impacts of climate
change”.27 A threat that is not attributable to a State cannot be ensured or protected against
by that State in cases where such protection cannot be achieved by the State alone.
6.10 Positive obligations under the Covenant do not require the maximum deployment of
possible resources or the realization of the highest possible ambition. To adopt such an
unprecedented test would not only place an impossible burden on States but also displace
reasonable policy choices made in good faith by States as they assess a range of threats and
challenges that have an impact on the enjoyment of human rights under the Covenant and
decide how to distribute limited resources to address them.
6.11 It would be both inappropriate and unfounded for the Committee to interpret the
Covenant in such a way as to allow it to remake the informed, good faith and difficult policy
decisions of a democratically elected Government which inherently involve compromises,
trade-offs and the allocation of limited resources across the range of challenges to the full
enjoyment of human rights. In urging the Committee to adopt an unduly broad interpretation
of a positive obligation, the authors invite the Committee to disregard States’ discretion in
making relevant decisions, even if exercised in good faith. Fulfilment of positive obligations
under the Covenant must recognize competing challenges to limited State resources.
6.12 The authors’ claims under article 27 of the Covenant are both factually and legally
incorrect. The State party is taking measures to prevent the islands from becoming unviable
for habitation through the adaptation and mitigation measures described at length in its
observations. The State party provides detailed information on legislation, policies and
practices designed to protect the cultural rights of Torres Strait islanders. Such measures
include the Torres Strait Islander Cultural Heritage Act 2003 (Qld), the Torres Strait Islander
Traditional Child Rearing Practice Act 2020 (Qld), the Traditional Ecological Knowledge
Project of the Torres Strait Regional Authority, the declaration of three Indigenous protected
areas in the Torres Strait region, the use of Torres Strait infrastructure and housing,
Indigenous land-use agreements, and the Local Thriving Communities programme. As a
matter of international law, article 27 of the Covenant does not involve any positive
obligation to prevent slow-onset risks that might arise in the future. A breach of article 27 of
the Covenant arises only at the time of any denial; it does not convert a risk of future denial
into a present breach. Even if the Committee were to admit an intergenerational element of
26
27
The State party provided detailed information in its submission on the measures it has taken
to address the harmful effects of climate change.
For example, Fanny Thornton, “The absurdity of relying on human rights law to go after emitters”,
in Debating Climate Law, Benoit Mayer and Alexander Zahar, eds. (Cambridge, United Kingdom,
Cambridge University Press, 2021), p. 159.
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