Climate Change: Honour financial commitments, AI tells wealthy nations
Amnesty International (AI) has urged rich countries to honour previous financial commitments they have failed to meet and adopt new ones which guarantee the rights of people in lower-income countries.
Speaking at the Summit for New Global Financing Pact (PACT) in Paris, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, Agnès Callamard, said “Many vulnerable, lower-income states have been overwhelmed by economic shocks, debts they cannot pay, and the effects of climate change – a crisis to which they contributed very little, but which is costing people in these countries dearly. These are unprecedented challenges that require a rethink of how the world’s financial architecture is set up.
“The rights of many people in vulnerable countries to access healthcare and social protection are not met at even the most basic level. There is a vital need to provide financial and technical assistance to these countries so that they can scale up social protection schemes to guarantee people’s right to an adequate standard of living.
“Unsustainable levels of debt can have grave implications for economic and social rights. The cost of servicing existing debt can divert essential financing away from crucial social spending. Coordinated international action offering debt relief can transform the ability of governments to invest in economic and social protections, supporting their capacity to protect the rights of their people.
“All creditors – states, private creditors, and international financial institutions – should cooperate to ensure timely debt relief for all countries in and at risk of debt distress and consider all options, including debt restructuring and debt cancellation.
“All states should support and fund the establishment of a global social protection fund to help countries that are struggling to provide adequate protections, as advocated by the International Labour Organisation and UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights.
“It is regrettable that many states, and civil society organisations and social movements representing communities worst affected by these crises, will not be represented at the summit. Those most exposed to the effects of climate change and national indebtedness should be allowed to contribute to discussions and engage in reforms that can achieve climate justice and economic security.
Article 2 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) obliges countries to take steps, including through international cooperation and assistance, to support other countries to meet their economic and social rights obligations.
Rich countries and big corporations have failed to fulfill a pledge to provide $100 billion annually to help states mitigate and adapt to climate change. A separate loss and damage fund has yet to be funded and become operational while a climate meeting in Bonn this month was hampered by disputes between wealthy and developing countries over climate finance.
Callamard noted that lower income countries cannot fairly phase out fossil fuels, protect people from the harms of the climate crisis and provide remedy to those most affected if wealthier states continue to evade their obligations of international cooperation and assistance under human rights law and the commitments taken under the 2015 Paris Agreement and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to provide climate finance to developing countries.
“Commitments to ensure urgent and sufficient relief for nations in debt distress, and more grants, are required to support those states struggling to protect the rights of people against the devastating impacts of the climate crisis and other disasters.
“With average global temperatures rising and set to far exceed the 1.5˚C increase over pre-industrial levels previously agreed to, the world is standing on the precipice of a climate disaster. This summit should offer a chance for global leaders to protect the rights of the world’s most marginalised people, not move the burden further onto those who are suffering the most but contributed the least to causing this crisis,” she said.