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History in making as World Court to advise on climate

History in making as World Court to advise on climate

Perth Now22-07-2025
For the first time, the world's highest court will offer advice on the world's biggest problem.
It's a punchy slogan that has been wielded successfully by young campaigners to build global momentum behind a landmark international climate case first conceived by a group of Pacific-based law students.
While not legally binding, Wednesday's long-awaited "advisory opinion" from the International Court of Justice will clarify the responsibility of nations to prevent climate harm and redress damage inflicted from spewing out greenhouse gases.
Cynthia Houniuhi, one of the 27 law students from a Vanuatu university who hatched the idea to seek legal opinion from the World Court, has experienced first-hand the impacts of climate change on her Solomon Islands homelands.
The president of Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change remembers returning to her father's home on Fanalei Island, where she observed a very different landscape than she had on previous visits.
Fewer houses, no children playing soccer on the sand and posts sticking out of the ocean, leftover from buildings otherwise consumed by the sea.
Pacific Island nations are particularly vulnerable to rising global temperatures.
Fiercer storms and cyclones are wreaking havoc, sea-level rise is threatening low-lying coastal villages, and weakened marine ecosystems are posing challenges for communities that rely on the ocean for food and income.
Rich countries are not immune, but small islands and low-lying developing countries' contribution to the problem has been far less, despite having to bear more of the costs and having fewer resources to adapt.
It's this injustice that has climate-vulnerable states pushing hard for faster emissions cuts as well as compensation for the loss and damage they have done little to create.
Ms Houniuhi is not expecting the World Court's advisory opinion to solve the climate crisis but says clarity around state obligations to act would make the law a stronger tool for holding governments to account.
She imagines a favourable result informing domestic climate legal activity, such as the case recently led by two Torres Strait Islanders, Uncle Pabai Pabai and Uncle Paul Kabai.
Australia's Federal Court ultimately rejected the case, determining the Commonwealth did not have a duty of care to protect their Torres Strait homelands from the impacts of climate change.
"The response from one of the uncles, it broke my heart," Ms Houniuhi tells AAP.
Getting the world's highest court to deliver an advisory opinion was no simple task for the global network of young climate campaigners, with a majority vote at the United Nations General Assembly required for it to proceed.
Vanuatu, a climate change-vulnerable South Pacific island nation of roughly 335,000, was the first to take up the cause.
From there, momentum built until a coalition of 132 nations unanimously adopted a resolution in 2023 to refer the case to the World Court.
Vanuatu's Minister for Climate Change Adaptation, Ralph Regenvanu, says such a display of state solidarity is significant and unlikely to be repeated ever again.
Mr Regenvanu, the first government official to listen to the young activists, is "very hopeful" for a strong outcome at the Peace Palace following favourable results in similar climate cases put to other top courts.
A good outcome, in his view, will clearly state that states have obligations under international law to prevent climate harm and to redress harm that's been done, as well as consequences for failing to act.
"There's a readily identifiable group of states who are the main offenders," he tells AAP.
"They're the ones who are going to bear the consequence of not fulfilling what, we hope, will be their legal duty to prevent climate harm."
The landmark case concludes ahead of the next round of international climate talks in November and Mr Regenvanu expects to use the advisory opinion to influence negotiations at the summit in Brazil.
Australia is still bidding to co-host the 2026 event alongside the Pacific and while Mr Regenvanu says the region's leaders remain committed, he was critical of some of the bigger nations' recent actions.
"Particularly the continuing rollout of new fossil fuel projects for the export market," he says.
University of Melbourne environmental law expert Jacqueline Peel says the World Court's stance on the science of climate change will be carefully watched.
"Particularly in the current context, where we have countries like the United States, for example, taking a very hostile view on climate science," she tells AAP.
Australia was among the 132 nations that co-sponsored the request for a World Court opinion but its submission took a "fairly narrow view" of its international obligations, centred around those already spelled out in the Paris Agreement.
Professor Peel says the advantage of Paris for big-emitting countries is that emission reduction targets and pacing are set by the nations themselves, rather than being subject to some broader international standard.
"Pacific countries would prefer that it's a broader approach that really emphasises the urgency of tackling the problems," she says.
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The total debts exceed $202 million. The largest creditor was UK-based non-bank loan agency, Global Loan Agency Services (GLAS), which claimed it was owed more than $800 million. The mine restarted last year after being in care and maintenance for 17 years. The Independent Planning Commission approved an amended application to reopen the mine in 2019, despite community opposition. The conditions stipulated that the mine would have to use the Hunter Tunnel rather than transport coal by truck. It must also use existing processing infrastructure and cannot mine the Piercefield Seam to reduce groundwater impact. New England MP Barnaby Joyce has called for the accelerated approval of Upper Hunter mining projects in order to offset the job losses at Dartbrook coal mine. Dartbrook, an underground thermal coal joint-venture by Australian Pacific Coal and Tetra Resources, went into external administration and receivership earlier this month after failing to meet its obligations for a $174 million loan to Singaporean commodities giant Vitol. The mine's receivers, FTI Consulting, terminated 104 miners or more than two-thirds of the workforce, earlier this week. It said in a statement making the mass terminations "wasn't an easy decision" but it was "necessary for Dartbrook's long-term future". Mr Joyce, whose New England electorate now incorporates Muswellbrook, said the job losses were not the result of a downturn in the coal industry. "Structurally, there's nothing wrong with it (Dartbrook), it's just carrying too much debt," Mr Joyce said. "People should not read the issues of Dartbrook as issues with the coal industry; the issues are with its internal financial management." "The guys who have lost their jobs shouldn't have lost their jobs because there's nothing fundamentally wrong with the market that they're in." He called on the state government to fast-track approvals for other mining projects in the region. "We have to make sure that the other mines in the area get their approvals," Mr Joyce said. "That's how we are going to absorb these jobs. There is absolute capacity in other precincts to absorb these jobs overnight. But if you are being forced to wait seven or eight years for approval, then unemployment is going to rise as people wait. "The Hunter Valley is the money bag for NSW, but if we take too long to open zippers, you are not going to have any money." In a statement, Muswellbrook Council said it was deeply concerned about how the job losses at Dartbrook Mine would affect workers, their families and the community. "Our thoughts are with those impacted, including local businesses owed significant amounts that compromise people's livelihoods. These are distressing times. The effects are felt by our whole community," the statement said. "Muswellbrook Shire Council's role is defined: to advocate for residents and workers in our Shire and ensure that decisions are transparent, accountable and prioritise our community. Council is pursuing every avenue to help those affected, directly and indirectly." The Mining and Energy Union (MEU) said it would fight for workers in the Fair Work Commission. Minutes from a creditors' meeting held earlier this month showed that at least 51 companies claimed they were owed money. The total debts exceed $202 million. The largest creditor was UK-based non-bank loan agency, Global Loan Agency Services (GLAS), which claimed it was owed more than $800 million. The mine restarted last year after being in care and maintenance for 17 years. The Independent Planning Commission approved an amended application to reopen the mine in 2019, despite community opposition. The conditions stipulated that the mine would have to use the Hunter Tunnel rather than transport coal by truck. It must also use existing processing infrastructure and cannot mine the Piercefield Seam to reduce groundwater impact.

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