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Explainer What can world's top court do about climate change?
The Straits Times
|December 04, 2024
ICJ begins hearings on states' obligations on climate harm, to issue advisory opinion
PARIS - The International Court of Justice (ICJ) began hearing arguments on Dec 2 in a major case on how international laws can be used to protect the climate as global warming accelerates.
It is the first time the court, which is the UN's highest judicial body, has taken up the climate issue, and a key concern at play is whether big polluters can be sued for failing to slow climate change.
The court, a 15-judge body in The Hague that deals with disputes among nations, is holding the hearings over the next two weeks in response to a request submitted last year by the UN General Assembly.
The General Assembly asked the court to give its opinion on two questions: What obligations do governments have under international law to protect the Earth's climate system from greenhouse gases? And what are the "legal consequences" if governments have failed in their obligations and "caused significant harm?"
The climate crisis has long been the subject of warnings from scientists and three decades of global negotiations to reduce harmful emissions, and the hearings follow on the heels of the latest UN climate summit, known as COP29.
That summit, which ended on Nov 24 in Baku, Azerbaijan, focused on negotiating finance for transitioning from fossil fuels to clean energy and helping poorer countries improve resilience to extreme weather.
Here is what to know about The Hague hearings, which can be followed from the court's website.
WHO WILL ADDRESS THE HEARINGS?
This story is from the December 04, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.
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