The Guardian (USA)

Children’s voices must be heard on climate crisis, says UN rights body

- Isabella Kaminski

Government­s must respond to growing concerns expressed by children about the effects of the climate crisis and other environmen­tal emergencie­s on their lives and futures, a UN body has said.

In a strongly worded formal opinion published on Monday, the Committee on the Rights of the Child concludes that the triple planetary crisis – the climate emergency, the collapse of biodiversi­ty and pervasive pollution – “is an urgent and systemic threat to children’s rights globally”.

The committee outlines the immediate risks that children face from poor air and water quality, a lack of food safety and exposure to toxic pollutants such as lead – especially children with disabiliti­es, belonging to minority or Indigenous groups, and living in areas vulnerable to climate breakdown and disasters.

It also points to structural challenges that pose a longer-term threat, such as greenhouse gas emissions, the unsustaina­ble use of resources and ecosystem degradatio­n.

Children are demanding action on these interconne­cted crises, said 14year-old Francisco Vera, a Unicef youth advocate for environmen­tal and climate action in Latin America and the Caribbean, “precisely because adults haven’t taken the responsibi­lity for it”.

The UN opinion spells out, for the first time, that states have a duty to safeguard a clean, healthy and sustainabl­e environmen­t for young people alive today, as well as future generation­s.

“While the rights of children who are present on Earth require immediate urgent attention,” it says, “the children constantly arriving are also entitled to the realisatio­n of their human rights to the maximum extent.”

Aoife Nolan, professor of internatio­nal human rights law at the

University of Nottingham, said this statement serves as a “crucial tool for those arguing for climate justice at both the internatio­nal and national law levels”.

Furthermor­e, government­s are responsibl­e for foreseeabl­e environmen­t-related threats arising as a result of their current acts or omissions, “the full implicatio­ns of which may not manifest for years or even decades”.

Some submission­s to the committee had asked it to take a stronger stance on state responsibi­lity to mitigate climate change, noting the Internatio­nal Energy Agency’s warning that there can be no new investment in coal, oil or gas if the world is to reach net zero by 2050.

The final UN opinion says delaying a rapid phase-out of fossil fuels will result in higher global emissions and greater harm to children’s rights, but only urges states to take this “into considerat­ion”.

The committee chair Ann Skelton, professor of law at the University of

Pretoria and director of the Centre for Child Law in South Africa, said some of the language in the document was strengthen­ed but the committee sought to keep “a little bit of a margin” for states to fulfil their duties, adding that its members are “not experts on the environmen­t”.

The UN body does, however, pay tribute to children’s efforts to draw attention to environmen­tal crises. The committee, which is responsibl­e for monitoring the implementa­tion of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, received 16,331 contributi­ons from children in 121 countries, who described how their health, lives and communitie­s were being harmed.

Under the convention, children should be “recognised and fully respected as environmen­tal actors”.

The opinion stresses that children have a right to be heard on crucial matters such as climate change.

“Children’s voices are a powerful global force for environmen­tal protection, and their views add relevant perspectiv­es and experience with respect to decision-making on environmen­tal matters at all levels.”

Greta Thunberg, the environmen­tal activist, inspired more than a million children all over the world to take part in a series of high-profile school climate strikes over the past few years, and young people are leading a significan­t portion of the growing number of climate lawsuits around the world.

This month, a judge ruled in favour of young plaintiffs in a landmark case seeking to hold the state of Montana to account for its climate impacts, and in September a group of young people in Portugal are due to appear before the European Court of Human Rights to confront 32 countries, including all EU member states, the UK, Norway, Switzerlan­d, Russia and Turkey. The youngest people in these cases are aged just five and 10.

“Advocacy from young people is hugely important in changing the parameters of societal, political and media discussion around environmen­tal protection,” said Nolan.

In 2021, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child rejected on technical groundsa landmark claim by a group of young people, including Greta Thunberg, that countries perpetuati­ng the climate crisis were violating their human rights.

Skelton said that, although the case was not accepted, it did set a groundbrea­king developmen­t in internatio­nal law that states are responsibl­e for harming people outside their borders.

“It also certainly galvanised the committee’s interest in deciding to issue this general comment. The case made us so aware of how children were feeling about these issues, how strongly they were fighting to get their views across.”

Amid a global crackdown on human rights defenders and climate activism, the committee also says government­s must protect children engaging in environmen­tal protests.

“The exercise by children of their rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and associatio­n, to informatio­n and education, to participat­e and be heard and to effective remedies can result in more rights-compliant, and therefore more ambitious and effective, environmen­tal policies.”

Francisco Vera said some people still believe children’s opinions are not valid, “but the potential for change is greater compared to the past when children were not listened to”.

Skelton hopes government­s will use the document to improve their policies and laws to better protect children, to involve children at all levels and to get tougher on corporatio­ns.

“The states are the ones that ratified the convention, therefore we hold them accountabl­e,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: Chameleons­eye/Getty Images ?? An Indigenous Fijian girl walks over flooded land after Cyclone Winston in 2016. The UN committee says the planetary crisis is is ‘an urgent and systemic threat to children’s rights globally’.
Photograph: Chameleons­eye/Getty Images An Indigenous Fijian girl walks over flooded land after Cyclone Winston in 2016. The UN committee says the planetary crisis is is ‘an urgent and systemic threat to children’s rights globally’.

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