Skip to content
June 22, 2025
Trending Tags
wordpress humanrights justice activism climatechange socialjustice democracy Crackdown

Rights To All

  • news
  • United Nations
  • health
  • Arms
  • Free Speech
  • Women’s Rights
  • Torture
  • support us

Breaking News

Ireland’s New Data Protection Law: A Threat to Transparency and Accountability

Uganda’s Labor Rights: Upholding the Treaty to Ensure Workplace Protection

Tanzania’s Brutal Treatment of Maasai People During Forced Evictions

South Korean Court Upholds Controversial Military ‘Sodomy’ Law: A Step Backward for LGBTQ+ Rights?

The Hidden Triggers: Unraveling the Escalating Conflict in Gaza and Israel

How to Remove Nigeria’s Fuel Subsidy Without Exacerbating Poverty

Justice Denied: The Plight of a Wrongfully Imprisoned Lawyer in Uzbekistan

Iraq’s Media Ban on “Homosexuality” and “Gender” Must Be Reversed Immediately

Examining the Aftermath: How Will Israel Respond to the Hamas-Led Attack Taking Hundreds of Lives?

Tanzania: Silencing Dissent – Arrests of Port Deal Critics Raise Concerns

 
  • Home
  • 2023
  • September
  • 4
  • Climate Justice for Africa: Engaging with the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee
  • Economic Justice and Rights

Climate Justice for Africa: Engaging with the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee

On 2 years Ago
Lee Olivia

Table of Contents

  • Embedding a Bottom-Up Approach to Climate Justice for Africa
    • Introduction
    • Wealthy Industrialized States’ Responsibility and Insufficient Action
    • The Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee
      • Compliance Function
      • Implementation Function
      • Bottom-Up Approach and Its Inherent Weaknesses
    • Potential for African States to Drive Climate Justice
      • Collaboration with Climate Justice Movements
    • Conclusion
  • You might want to read !

Embedding a Bottom-Up Approach to Climate Justice for Africa

Introduction

African leaders are preparing to gather in Nairobi in September 2023 for the Africa Climate Summit. This summit is crucial for the continent as it seeks to establish a unified position on key climate change challenges. African leaders will then negotiate these challenges at the upcoming COP28 in Dubai. The Paris Agreement, which mandates that states take action to address climate change while considering their obligations on human rights, will serve as a guiding framework for these discussions.

Wealthy Industrialized States’ Responsibility and Insufficient Action

Wealthy industrialized states bear significant responsibility for causing and accelerating climate change. They have both the economic and technological means to address this crisis. Consequently, the Paris Agreement places greater obligations on them, including reducing emissions at a faster pace and providing climate finance, capacity-building, and technology transfer to developing countries. However, the climate actions taken by wealthy states so far have not been ambitious enough to effectively tackle climate change or enable impoverished nations to adapt.

The Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee

Until recently, there was no fully operational mechanism to monitor states’ compliance with their obligations under the Paris Agreement. However, at COP27, held in November 2022 in Sharm el-Sheikh, states adopted the rules of procedure for the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee (PAICC). This committee serves two functions: compliance and implementation.

Compliance Function

The compliance function allows the PAICC to independently monitor states’ compliance with the obligations outlined in the Paris Agreement. This includes the submission of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) every five years by all states and the provision of information on the mobilization of climate finance by wealthy states. However, this function does not empower the PAICC to ensure that these submissions align with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

Implementation Function

The PAICC’s implementation function is facilitative in nature. It provides substantive recommendations to states that request support in implementing their commitments under the Paris Agreement. However, this function can only be triggered with the consent of a specific state seeking guidance. This limited implementation mechanism undermines its effectiveness as it relies on a bottom-up approach to climate action.

Bottom-Up Approach and Its Inherent Weaknesses

The international climate change regime has historically followed a bottom-up approach, allowing states to set their own emission reduction targets, select adaptation measures, and determine their contribution to climate finance. This approach is embedded in the PAICC’s implementation function, wherein states engage with the committee at their discretion. The PAICC also permits states to decide whether its recommendations should remain confidential, contradicting the expectation of transparency outlined in the Paris Agreement. Consequently, the bottom-up approach undermines the effectiveness of the implementation mechanism and raises concerns about the PAICC’s ability to deliver climate justice.

Potential for African States to Drive Climate Justice

African states must continue using every available means to achieve climate justice and ensure compliance with the Paris Agreement. This includes leveraging their collective voice during the Africa Climate Summit and reflecting on their engagement with the PAICC. African states should focus on the inadequate financing hindering their ability to implement and comply with their adaptation and loss and damage needs outlined in their NDCs and National Adaptation Plans.

Collaboration with Climate Justice Movements

In collaboration with climate justice movements, African states can advocate for increased finance from wealthy states to address climate adaptation and loss and damage. Additionally, they should consider the PAICC as an additional direction for their efforts. Climate justice movements in wealthy states should also lend support by urging their governments to engage with the PAICC and implement its recommendations. This collective action can transform the PAICC into a critical tool for delivering climate justice and advancing the respect, protection, and fulfillment of human rights in Africa and beyond.

Conclusion

The Africa Climate Summit provides African states with a significant opportunity to strengthen their engagement with the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee. By addressing the inadequate financing they face and collaborating with climate justice movements, African states can drive equitable and just climate action. These efforts will be instrumental in ensuring the implementation and compliance of the Paris Agreement and ultimately delivering climate justice for Africa and the world.

ClimateJustice–climatejustice,Africa,ParisAgreement,implementation,compliance,committee


Climate Justice for Africa: Engaging with the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee
<< photo by Lobacheva Ina >>
The image is for illustrative purposes only and does not depict the actual situation.

You might want to read !

  • Youth from 100 countries demand climate justice at Climate Justice Camp: A call to action before COP28
  • Youth Activists Mobilize for Climate Justice at Global Camp: Highlights and Demands Ahead of COP28
  • Preparing for Change: Global Youth Unite in Lebanon to Tackle Climate Crisis
  • Zimbabwe: The Dark Shadow Cast on Mnangagwa’s Inauguration by Arrests and Torture of Political Activists.
  • Reviving Africa: Breaking Free from Colonial Chains and Embracing a Sustainable Pan-African Future
  • Decolonizing Africa’s Climate Agenda: Forging a Sustainable Pan-African Future
  • “Beyond Paris: Exploring Effective Solutions to Combat Climate Change”
  • Centering Human Rights: Africa’s Leaders Urged to Take Ambitious Action at Key Climate Summit
  • “Empowering Pakistan: How the IMF Can Support Electricity Access for All”
  • Risking Freedom: The Dangers of Afghanistan’s Total Surveillance State
  • The Humanitarian Crisis in Aleppo: Balancing Building Safety and Preventing Forced Evictions
  • Ecuador’s Historic Referendum: A Collective Push to Preserve the Amazon Rainforest
  • Exposing the Eco-Facades: Europe’s ‘Dirty Dozen’ Oil and Gas Giants Culpable of Greenwashing
  • Opportunities and Challenges: Unpacking the Africa Climate Summit for African Youth
  • Unveiling the Dark Side: Greenpeace France’s Exposé on Fossil Fuel Greenwashing
In Economic Justice and RightsIn Africa , climatejustice , committee , compliance , implementation , Parisagreement

Post navigation

Zimbabwe: The Dark Shadow Cast on Mnangagwa’s Inauguration by Arrests and Torture of Political Activists.
Exploring Comprehensive Solutions at the Climate Summit: Beyond Carbon Markets

You May Like

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Samantha Chen
On 2 years Ago

“Will the Council of Europe prioritize the right to a healthy environment as a litmus test for progress?”

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Liu David
On 2 years Ago

Tackling the Blaze: Balancing Conservation and Crisis in the Amazon Rainforest

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Liu David
On 2 years Ago

Greenpeace Hails Brazil’s Climate Target Correction as a Crucial Step Forward

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Patel Maya
On 2 years Ago

The Urgent Need for International Efforts to Tackle Pakistan’s Deadly Heatwaves

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Lee Olivia
On 2 years Ago

Companies Must Be Held Accountable for FSO SAFER Oil Transfer: Greenpeace MENA

  • Economic Justice and Rights
Patel Maya
On 2 years Ago

Hyundai Construction Equipment Pledges to Combat Illegal Mining in Amazon Following Greenpeace Report

Rights To All @ Copyright All right reserved