Oman Daily Observer

Rights protection hangs in balance at climate talks

- SEBASTIEN MALO

Top officials and advocates are pushing at UN talks in Poland to ensure government­s and businesses respect human rights when working to build a green future under the Paris climate pact. The climate change conference, due to end today, is struggling to agree rules for efforts to keep global temperatur­e rise “well below” 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times, a goal enshrined in the 2015 Paris accord.

One sticking point is how obligation­s on human rights should be incorporat­ed into the “rule book” for implementi­ng the Paris deal.

“Climate change already has affected the lives of so many people — the right to food because of terrible droughts, the right to live in proper ways,” UN Human Rights Chief Michelle Bachelet said at the talks.

Most references to human rights have been stripped out of the text now under negotiatio­n in Katowice, experts said.

However, it remains in clauses relating to carbon markets, although Egypt has opposed its inclusion, they added.

The wording is key to avoid a repeat of previous rights abuses linked to carbon credits for renewable energy projects under the Kyoto Protocol, said Sebastien Duyck, a senior attorney at the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law (CIEL).

The Kyoto Protocol is a treaty to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, which expires in 2020 when the Paris Agreement takes off.

In Panama, the constructi­on of a hydroelect­ric dam had been eligible to receive carbon credits under the Clean Developmen­t Mechanism (CDM), a scheme for rich nations to offset their emissions under the Kyoto Protocol, despite displacing indigenous people, CIEL said.

The Barro Blanco Dam had forced from their homes indigenous Ngabe who lived on the site of its reservoir, said Duyck. In 2016, builders of Barro Blanco finally withdrew the dam from the CDM, he said.

Similar problems with other CDM projects have been reported in countries including Honduras, Guatemala and Kenya.

Bachelet said her organisati­on had collected reports of such abuses, but relied on national human rights watchdogs for that informatio­n.

It was important to strengthen the independen­ce of those national agencies, typically funded by government­s, to ensure human rights and green developmen­t go hand in hand, she said. It is “a political issue”, she emphasised. Sachs lamented that links between human rights and climate change were not more central in the Paris “rule book” draft.

Wild weather — from record-breaking hurricanes to punishing floods and drought — has grown stronger around the world as the planet warms, with dramatic humanitari­an consequenc­es.

“I think the bigger issue with climate change is millions are being displaced — not because of projects but because of climate change — and so we should focus on climate change as a violation of rights,” he said.

Bringing to court those most responsibl­e for global warming — including fossil fuel companies, a growing trend in the United States — was a large part of respecting human rights, he said.

Activists said they were running out of patience.

Standing in front of a banner reading “Protect our rights”, New Zealand climate activist Kera Sherwood-o’regan urged negotiator­s gathered in a corridor to call their ministers and “tell them right now that we need our rights in the text.”

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