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Developing States and International Environmental Law: The Importance of Differentiated Responsibilities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2008

Extract

The protection of the global environment has become one of the central objectives of the international community in recent decades. Issues such as climate change, the depletion of the ozone layer, and the loss of the biological diversity has resulted in a growing international awareness of the problems facing the planet. Moreover, there is also recognition that States will need to act more collaboratively at the international level if effective solutions are to be found to these problems. However, concurrently there is also recognition that many States have pressing socio-economic concerns of their own, and that they have neither the resources nor the capabilities with which to devote to such global issues—so called “developing” States. This article examines the response of international environmental law to these two, potentially opposing, trends, viz., the need for universalism, on the one hand, and sensitivity to the needs of developing States, on the other. In particular, the article will examine the emerging legal principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities”, as well as discussing the various means of operationalising it. Nevertheless, as will be discussed below, there is still much debate as to the conceptual basis of this principle—leading one to question its real aim. Is it to contribute to a fairer world system in which developed States recognise their historical responsibility for past environmental damage, or is it simply an expedient means of ensuring the participation of developing States in what are primarily Northern concerns?

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Articles
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Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2000

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References

1. “Sustainable Development” is the notion that economic development, social progress and environmental protection can be made compatible. As the 1987 Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, Our Common Future noted, “[it is] development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”, p.43.

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21. On a related issue, both the Climate Change Convention (Art.4.3) and the Kyoto Protocol (Art. 11.2) (37 I.L.M. (1998) 22) utilise the notion of “appropriate burden sharing” to guide the future negotiation of financial commitments between developed country Parties. As with the use of the notion of equity in international environmental law, “burden sharing” presumably requires all relevant considerations to be taken into account before a conclusion is reached.

22. Both the Climate Change Convention and Agenda 21 make constant references to the needs and circumstances of developing countries. In fact, it might be suggested that such references are overused and therefore arguably lose some of their influence.

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36. Arts.11 and 21.3 1992 Climate Change Convention, and Arts.21 and 39 1992 Biodiversity Convention.

37. Art.21 1994 Desertification Convention. The Financial Mechanisms under the Climate Change, Biodiversity and Desertification Conventions are all partly administered by the restructured GEF.

38. Art.26.2 1995 Straddling Fish Stocks Convention. Funding is also available at the regional level; Art.IX.3 1996 Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans of the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area (36 I.L.M. (1997) 777) sets up a supplementary conservation fund for the purposes of “monitoring, research, training and projects relating to the conservation of cetaceans”.

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40. See, for example, para.15(1) UNGA Res. 44/228: “to examine the possibility of a special international fund”.

41. Art.25.2 1995 Straddling Fish Stocks Convention.

42. Art.13.1(1) 1996 London Protocol.

43. See for example, Art.6 1992 Climate Change Convention (education, training and public awareness); Arts.12 (research and training) and 13 (public education and awareness) 1992 Biodiversity Convention; and ss.2 and 3 1994 Desertification Convention.

44. Art.19.1 1994 Desertification Convention.

45. Emphasis added.

46. Nevertheless, the International Law Commission in a 1997 paper noted, “[i]t is the view of the Commission that the economic level of States is one of the factors to be taken into account in determining whether a State has complied with its obligation of due diligence. But a State's economic level cannot be used to discharge a State from its obligation under the present articles” (UN Doc A/CN.4/L554 and Corr.1–2, Add.l and Add.l/CorT.1–2, and Add.2 and Add2/Corr.1, Art3 commentary para.14).

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55. Cf. the 1994 Sulphur Protocol has tried to differentiate not only on each State's contribution to the problem, but also the assimilative capacity of the receiving environment.

56. Hurrell and Kingsbury, op. cit. supra nn.53, 39.

57. ibid.

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61. 1996 UNEP Final Report of the Expert Group Workshop on International Environmental Law aiming at Sustainable Development, para.43(a).

62. See Art.4.4 1992 Climate Change Convention: obligation on developed country Parties to help those “particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change in meeting the costs of adaptation to those adverse effects”.

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65. Interestingly, the States of Nauru, Tuvalu and Kiribati issued identical statements to the 1992 Climate Change Convention declaring that it was their “understanding that signature of the convention shall in no way constitute a renunciation of any rights under international law concerning state responsibility for the adverse effects of climate change, and that no provisions in the convention can be interpreted as derogating from the principles of general international law”; see Sands, op. cit. supra nn.206, 275.

66. See Weiss, E. Brown, In Fairness to Future Generations: International Law, Common Patrimony and Intergenerational Equity (1989)Google Scholar: “[i]n the intragenerational context, conservation of access implies that all people should have a minimum level of access to the common patrimony”.

67. Twenty-first preambular paragraph, 1992 Climate Change Convention. Hurrell and Kingsbury, op. cit. supra nn.53, 39: “rich countries [must]… provide assistance to the South to cover costs of specific measures to tackle global environmental threats sq that resources are not diverted from development”.

68. UN Doc E/CN.17/1997/8: Report of the Secretary-General: Rio Declaration on Environment and Development: Application and Implementation (10 Feb. 1997), para.40. See also Principle 11 of the Rio Declaration: “States shall enact effective environmental legislation. Environmental standards, management objectives and priorities should reflect the environmental and developmental context to which they apply. Standards applied by some countries may be inappropriate and of unwarranted economic and social cost to other countries, in particular developing countries”.

69. 1997 Report of the Secretary-General: Overall progress achieved since the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development: International Legal Instruments and Mechanism, Box 5.

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71. Third preambular paragraph, 1992 Climate Change Convention.

72. Interestingly, a number of State Parties at the third Conference of the Parties to the Climate Change Convention (1997), which concluded negotiations on the Kyoto Protocol, were adamant that the most polluting developing State Parties should accept greater responsibility for climate change. Such a view did not however prevail, primarily because the Berlin Mandate that began the negotiation process clearly stated developing State Parties were not to be subject to any new obligations at that point in time.

73. Third preambular paragraph, Rio Declaration.

74. 1995 Report of the Expert Group on Identification of Principles of International Law for Sustainable Development, para.78.

75. 1995 Report of the Expert Group on Identification of Principles of International Law for Sustainable Development, para.77.

76. Vasciannie, op. cit. supra nn.58, 25: “the interdependence of States in the international community has generated strong pressures on developed countries to assume responsibility for their developing counterparts”.

77. Berdt Romilly, G. de, “Comment on P. Sand's Paper on Institutionalizing Sustainable Development” in Lang, W. (ed.), op. cit. supra nn.47, 188.Google Scholar

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79. Jordan, A., The International Organisational Machinery for Sustainable Development (1993), 7. Arguably, the effect of such “sweeteners” can be seen in the fact that many more developing States acceded to the Montreal Protocol after 1990, than other environmental conventions, such as the 1979 Bonn Convention, which contain little or no differentiation.Google Scholar

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81. Boyle, A., “Comment on D. Pone-Nava's Paper on Capacity-Building” in Lang, W. (ed.), op. cit. supra nn.47, 138Google Scholar: “the arguments for linking … [financial and technology transfer] provisions to environmental protection measures are different from the focus on economic self-determination that prevailed in the resource conflicts of the 1970s. Now the problem is to persuade developing states to participate in treaty regimes that they may perceive as offering little benefit or as hindering their ”freedom to develop”.

82. ibid.

83. Handl, G., “Environmental Security and Global Change: The Challenge to International Law” (1990) I Y.I.E.L. 9Google Scholar. In fact, trying to beat the “lowest common denominator” problem may actually be considered a further justification for differentiation.

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85. Handl, loc. cit. supra nn.83, 10. However, Handl does go on to say that “retaining uniformity with regard to core obligations while taking into account states' socio-economic conditions, are entirely compatible objectives for multilateral regulatory regimes”. The question must therefore be what he considers “core obligations”, and what effect should socio-economic conditions have upon them?

86. Boyle, op. cit. supra nn.81, 139.

87. I.C.J. Report (1997) 88.

88. Jordan, op. cit. supra nn.79, 7: “the North's offer of extra resources and appropriate access to environmentally friendly technologies, was [at UNCED] both narrow (i.e. it was mainly for global environmental protection) and limited (i.e. it still left open the question of patents and intellectual property rights), but it proved to be sufficiently large to garner the necessary level of developing country support”.

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