The Borneo Post

Small islands take ocean protection case to UN court

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HAMBURG, Germany: The UN maritime court will on Monday hear a landmark case brought by a group of small island states seeking protection of the world’s oceans from catastroph­ic climate change.

The nine island states have turned to the Internatio­nal Tribunal for the Law of the Sea to determine if carbon dioxide emissions absorbed by the oceans can be considered pollution, and if so, what obligation­s countries have to prevent it.

Ocean ecosystems create half the oxygen humans breathe and limit global warming by absorbing much of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activities.

But increasing emissions can warm and acidify seawaters, harming marine life.

The counties have pointed to the internatio­nal treaty UNCLOS that binds countries to preventing pollution of the oceans.

The UN treaty defines pollution as the introducti­on by humans of “substances or energy into the marine environmen­t” that leads to harm to marine life.

But it does not spell out carbon emissions as a specific pollutant, and the plaintiffs argue these emissions qualify.

“Entire marine and coastal ecosystems are dying in waters that are becoming warmer and more acidic. The science is clear and undisputed: these impacts are the result of climate change brought on by greenhouse gas emissions,” said Tuvalu’s Prime Minister Kausea Natano.

“We come here seeking urgent help, in the strong belief that internatio­nal law is an essential mechanism for correcting the manifest injustice that our people are suffering as a result of climate change.”

The push for climate justice won a big boost when the UN General Assembly in March adopted a resolution calling on the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to lay out nations’ obligation­s on protecting Earth’s climate and the legal consequenc­es they face if they fail to do so.

The move at the UN had been led by Vanuatu, which also counts among the plaintiffs in Monday’s case in Hamburg, Germany.

Small islands like Vanuatu are particular­ly exposed to the impact of global warming, with seawater rises threatenin­g to submerge entire countries.

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