| Author: Pearce Clancy: Postdoctoral Fellow, Law School, Trinity College Dublin. NUI EJ Phelan Fellow in International Law 2022-2024.
On 23 July 2025, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued its Advisory Opinion on the Obligations of States in Respect of Climate Change. This Opinion focuses first and foremost on issues of international environmental law and international climate change law. Nonetheless, and beyond the universal threat of climate degradation and collapse, elements of its legal analysis are also of direct interest to Palestine and the ongoing genocide imposed on the Palestinian people. This short piece serves to identify three such elements and explore in brief how they may be used in the pursuit of justice and accountability for Palestine through international law.
Armed Conflict and Climate Change
In its oral submissions to the Court in relation to the Advisory Opinion, the State of Palestine put considerable emphasis on the relationship between armed conflict and environmental degradation, and the protections afforded to the natural environment by international humanitarian law. In doing so, Professor Nilufer Oral, as counsel for the State of Palestine, outlined the applicable international humanitarian law rules providing protection for the environment, as well as issuing a call for the Court to provide:
‘… clear guidance on the application of international humanitarian law to the harmful effects on climate change from armed conflict and other military activities. In particular, we request that the Court clarify that the environment, including carbon sinks and reservoirs, is a civilian object and that the rules of distinction, proportionality and precaution apply to armed conflict and other military activities that generate GHG emissions and contribute to climate change.’
Further, Kate Macintosh, also counsel for the State of Palestine, stressed that there is a serious gap in the reporting of greenhouse gas emissions during armed conflict, including situations of occupation. Israel, for example, does not include its emissions in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, whether from the genocide in Gaza or from the unlawful settlement enterprise, in its emissions reports, nor does it report the destruction of carbon sinks.
Nonetheless, the Court does not engage with the issue of armed conflict. In fact, armed conflict is only addressed in the separate declaration issued by Judge Cleveland. In her declaration, the Judge avers that states are indeed under an obligation ‘to assess, report on and mitigate harms to the climate system … resulting from armed conflict and other military activities.’
The Duty to Prevent (Genocide)
A point of considerable importance in legal discussions regarding the obligations of third states vis-à-vis the genocide in Gaza is the duty to prevent genocide. First addressed by the ICJ in its 2007 judgment in Bosnia v Serbia, the duty to prevent requires states ‘to employ all means reasonably available to them, so as to prevent genocide so far as possible.’ As explained by the Court in 2007, the duty requires states to act with due diligence, with states that are better placed to influence the relevant actors being held to a higher standard.
A comparable duty to prevent similarly exists in international environmental law, articulated more specifically as a ‘duty to prevent significant harm to the environment’. The Court had previously addressed this environmental duty in its judgment in the Pulp Mills case, but had not directly compared it to the duty to prevent genocide. In the recent Advisory Opinion, however, the ICJ directly links the environmental duty to prevent and the duty to prevent genocide. In setting out the nature of due diligence (see para. 132-139), the Court uses its dictum in Bosnia v Serbia to outline the nature of the environmental duty to prevent. This is significant as in Bosnia v Serbia (see para. 429), the ICJ was at pains to stress that it was not developing a general conception of the ‘duty to prevent’ as it appears in all or even some instruments, but only as it applies in the Genocide Convention. The Court’s invoking of the duty to prevent genocide as an indicator of the structure of the environmental duty to prevent, then, suggests that the modalities of one also apply to the other.
Reading down the Opinion (at para. 428), the Court makes an important point regarding the duty to prevent and private actors, such as businesses, located or operating within the territory of a state. The ICJ states that:
‘In relation to private actors, the Court observes that the obligations it has identified under question (a) include the obligation of States to regulate the activities of private actors as a matter of due diligence … Thus, a State may be responsible where, for example, it has failed to exercise due diligence by not taking the necessary regulatory and legislative measures to limit the quantity of emissions caused by private actors under its jurisdiction.’ |