What did the ICJ say on climate obligations?
Context
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In July 2025, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued an advisory opinion on states’ obligations under international climate law, following a request from the UN General Assembly (2023).
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The opinion affirms multilateral climate law but raises concerns over equity, enforceability, and developmental needs of the Global South.
Affirmation of the Global South’s Case
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Validates the entire climate regime: UNFCCC, Kyoto Protocol, and Paris Agreement, rejecting attempts to sideline older agreements.
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Reaffirms Annex-I & Annex-II responsibilities:
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Annex-I: Developed nations must take binding emission reduction targets & report actions.
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Annex-II: Provide finance, technology transfer, and capacity-building to developing nations.
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CBDR-RC (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities & Respective Capabilities):
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Declared the core guiding principle for climate treaty implementation.
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Extended its relevance beyond climate to other environmental treaties.
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Paris Agreement Temperature Goal Controversy
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Reinterpreted temperature goal:
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Declares 1.5°C as the binding target (not 2°C with “efforts” toward 1.5°C under Art. 2.1(a)).
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Based on COP-26 & COP-28 decisions—controversially elevating COP decisions above treaty text.
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Criticism:
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Ignores feasibility & equity concerns for developing nations.
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Risks imposing unrealistic obligations on low-emission, low-income states.
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Enforcement of Obligations
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Differentiates obligations:
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Obligations of Conduct: Effort-based (e.g., climate policies).
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Obligations of Result: Outcome-based (e.g., submitting NDCs).
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Enforcement gaps:
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Only procedural duties treated as obligations of result.
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No new enforcement mechanism introduced—relies on national/regional courts for accountability.
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Critical Gaps in the Opinion
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Neglect of Global South’s development needs:
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Energy access & poverty eradication require equitable carbon space.
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Low-carbon development still hindered by inadequate finance & technology access.
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Missed opportunity: No binding accountability for major emitters.
Scope for Future Litigation
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Enables climate litigation at national/regional courts (e.g., compensation for climate damages).
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But high bar for success: Plaintiffs must prove attribution, causation, and wrongfulness.
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Global impact limited: Unlikely to shift power dynamics in negotiations.
UPSC Relevance
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GS 2: Role of ICJ, multilateral treaties, global South concerns.
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GS 3: Climate change, CBDR-RC, Paris Agreement.
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Essay: “Equity and climate justice in global governance.”
Conclusion
The ICJ’s advisory opinion strengthens the legal authority of the global climate regime and affirms CBDR-RC, offering a moral boost to the Global South. However, by elevating 1.5°C as a binding obligation without addressing developmental equity, finance, and enforceability, the opinion risks being aspirational rather than transformative. A balanced approach—ensuring climate justice, carbon space for developing nations, and binding support from the Global North—remains essential for an effective and equitable global climate framework.





