Saturday 30th of August 2025

a hoax that isn't a hoax....

The International Court of Justice handed down a significant climate action advisory opinion at the behest of the UN last month. Rex Patrick looks at Australia’s response.

So far, Australia’s approach to the ICJ’s climate advisory has been to try having its carbon cake and eating it too.

Along with 130 other countries, the Australian Government co-sponsored Vanuatu’s United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolution requesting an advisory opinion on nation-states’ climate action obligations. It then proceeded to argue against generalised obligations and against the proposition of generalised legal consequences.

The questions before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) were significant.

“What are the obligations of States under international law to ensure the protection of the climate system and other parts of the environment from anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases for States and for present and future generations?”

And

“What are the legal consequences under these obligations for States where they, by their acts and omissions, have caused significant harm to the climate system and other parts of the environment, with respect to [in particular, small island developing States and peoples and individuals of the present and future generations affected by the adverse effects of climate change].”

The ICJ advice

In the ICJ’s 23 July 2025 advisory opinion, the following was stated in relation to obligations:

“Taking into account the adverse effects of climate change on the enjoyment of human rights, the Court considers that the full enjoyment of human rights cannot be ensured without the protection of the climate system and other parts of the environment. In order to guarantee the effective enjoyment of human rights,”

States must take measures to protect the climate system and other parts of the environment. …

“… States must therefore take their obligations under international human rights law into account when implementing their obligations under the climate change treaties and other relevant environmental treaties and under customary international law, just as they must take their obligations under the climate change treaties and other relevant environmental treaties and under customary international law into account when implementing their human rights obligations.”

The following was stated in respect of legal consequences:

“As a general observation, the Court notes that breaches of States’ obligations [in respect of anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases] may give rise to the entire panoply of legal consequences provided for under the law of State responsibility. These include obligations of cessation and non-repetition, which are consequences that apply irrespective of the existence of harm, as well as”

the consequences requiring full reparation, including restitution, compensation and/or satisfaction.

Australia’s response

A new FOI release shows the government considered the advisory opinion to be “an important contribution” in clarifying the obligations of states to respond to the climate emergency.

The Climate Change Minister’s question time brief acknowledges the “unprecedented degree of participation by states in the ICJ proceedings”

It also revealed that “Australia is carefully considering the ICJ’s opinion”.

The brief advises Minister Chris Bowen to deflect any questions as to whether Australia agrees with the ICJ’s conclusions, suggesting he answer “Australia respects the role and independence of the International Court of Justice in upholding international law”.

If the minister is asked if Australia will support a UNGA resolution to endorse the ICJ advisory opinion, the brief suggests he responds by saying “Australia has been listening to our region and looks forward to discussing the appropriate next steps with our Pacific partners following the advisory opinion, including consideration of any UNGA resolution on the ICJ advisory opinion.”

George Orwell would have been proud to use such words in “1984”.

https://michaelwest.com.au/icj-climate-action-advisory-government-doublespeak/

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

*GUSNOTE: GLOBAL WARMING (AKA CLIMATE CHANGE) IS OFTEN TOOTED BY MANY ALTERNATIVE IDEOLOGISTS (ON WEBSITES, INCLUDING OFFGUARDIAN ET AL) AS A HOAX INVENTED BY THE WESTERN INDUSTRIALISTS IN ORDER TO CONTROL THE POPULATIONS OF ALL COUNTRIES ON EARTH WITH FEAR... 

GLOBAL WARMING WAS "INVENTED" BY THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. BUT IT'S NOT A HOAX: GLOBAL WARMING IS REAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC. THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IS NEARLY ENTIRELY BASED ON BURNING FOSSIL FUELS. BY DOING SO, WE ARE BRINGING BACK TO THE SURFACE of the planet (LAND, SEA AND ATMOSPHERE) CARBON THAT HAS BEEN SEQUESTRED BY PAST EVENTS — EVENTS THAT WE KNOW BECAME WARMER DUE TO THE OVER-ABUNDANCE OF WARMING GASES (CO2, ETC) IN THE ATMOSPHERE UNTIL CATASTROPHIC CHANGES WERE INDUCED BY THIS EXTRA HEAT. LIFE DIED. TREES BECAME COAL AND ANIMALS BECAME OIL...

WE ARE RECREATING THOSE CONDITIONS AT A MILLION TIME THE SPEED OF THESE PAST EVENTS... 

SEE ALSO: https://www.yourdemocracy.net.au/drupal/node/33090

 

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

debrief....

Broken records

FIRES: Wildfires have burned through more than 1m hectares of land across the EU, making 2025 the worst year on record, the Guardian reported. Blazes in the EU have burned four times as much land this year as the average over the past two decades, according to data from the European Forest Fire Information System, the outlet said. Meanwhile, the UK has “almost certainly” faced its hottest summer on record, according to provisional Met Office data covered by BBC News.

FLOODS: At least 34 people have been killed as heavy rainfall across India and Pakistan continued to cause flash floods and landslides in Indian-controlled Kashmir, the Associated Press reported. Continuing extreme rainfall in China has caused more than $2bn in damages since July, noted Reuters. Typhoon Kajiki has killed at least eight people in Vietnam and Thailand, with more flash floods and mudslides expected, Channel News Asia reported.

Turbine turbulence

POWER SHOCK: Shares in the Danish wind-power developer Ørsted dropped to a record low after the Trump administration ordered the firm to stop work on a near-complete project, the Financial Times reported. The $1.5bn Revolution Wind project is four-fifths complete and was due to power 350,000 homes in Rhode Island and Connecticut, the newspaper said.

‘WINDFARM WASTE’: In the UK, the energy regulator Ofgem announced that energy bills will rise by 2% for millions of households in October, with the Times reporting that part of the increase is due to the rising cost of “paying wind farms to switch themselves off”. The news sparked a wave of critical editorials and comment pieces in right-leaning and climate-sceptic UK newspapers. A Carbon Brief factcheck previously explained how gas prices, rather than “balancing costs” associated with wind farms, are the largest driver of high electricity prices in the UK.

Around the world 
  • FORESTS FOREVER: At a summit in Colombia, Brazil won the backing of other Amazon nations for its $125bn “Tropical Forests Forever Facility”, a fund first launched at COP28 in 2023, Bloomberg reported.
  • CHINA CAP: China’s cabinet announced that the country will “tighten its carbon trading market by introducing absolute emissions caps in some industries for the first time starting by 2027”, Reuters said.
  • RECORD RENEWABLES: Global renewables investment increased by 10% in the first half of the year, when compared to last year, to a record $386bn, according to new data from BloombergNEF covered by BusinessGreen.
  • BANKING BREAK: The Net-Zero Banking Alliance has “paused” its activities “after losing top European and Wall Street members amid Trump’s ongoing crusade against climate change”, reported the Financial Times.
  • STAFF SUSPENDED: The US Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) has suspended more than 20 members of staff who signed an open letter warning that Trump’s cuts to the body could risk a “national catastrophe” on the scale of Hurricane Katrina, according to BBC News.
 87%

The percentage of new coal-power capacity located in China or India that came online globally in the first half of 2025, as revealed in a guest post for Carbon Brief written by Global Energy Monitor researchers.

 Latest climate research 
  • Exposure to heatwaves may cause people to age faster | Nature Climate Change
  • The number of supercell thunderstorms – the “most hazardous thunderstorm category” – could increase by an average of 11% in Europe under 3C of global warming | Science Advances
  • Sea level rise projections from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) second assessment in 1995 were “strikingly close to what transpired over the next 30 years” | Earth’s Future

(For more, see Carbon Brief’s in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on TuesdayWednesdayThursday and Friday.)

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.