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Report

Call for Inputs – The Ocean and Human Rights

Issued by

Special Rapporteur on the human right to a healthy environment

Published

31 December 2024

Report

Issued by Special Procedures

Subject

Environment

Symbol Number

A/HRC/58/59

Summary

In the present report the Special Rapporteur on the human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment, Astrid Puentes Riaño, considers the relationship between the ocean and human rights and why ocean issues are human rights issues.

Background

The ocean is the world’s largest biome, covering 70% of the Earth. Oceans and coastal areas have been essential for humanity to thrive, and are essential in many aspects, including for housing, transportation, food, culture, and leisure. Clean, healthy and sustainable oceans are critical for humanity’s survival, especially for Indigenous Peoples and coastal communities, and for the survival of healthy and sustainable ecosystems, which many species depend on.

Despite the importance of oceans, human-induced activities are causing significant environmental and climate impacts, some of them irreversible, to an extent that are also impacting the enjoyment of several human rights, including the right to a healthy environment, right to life, food, work, culture, among others. Harmful impacts are linked to unsustainable practices such as overfishing and pollution including from oil spills, oil and gas extraction, waste and sewage dump, plastic, and noise pollution from shipping vessels and other sources. Other marine harms include inadequate planning and control of large projects such as power plants, wind turbines, ports and tourism areas; and urbanisation.

The IPCC report confirms that climate change is exacerbating these impacts leading to increasing ocean warming and acidification, changing weather patterns, extreme weather events including frequent marine heat waves, glacial melts, sea level rise and saltwater contamination.[1.1] In fact, scientific studies have concluded that ocean acidification is one of the planetary boundaries that is close to be breached.[1.2] Scientists have recently[1.3] raised the alarm on the potential irreversible effects of the weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a system of ocean currents regulating heating and cooling of the world’s climate. Other irreversible impacts include the collapse of fisheries, and extinction of species.

At the same time, there is an important series of international, regional and national policies and laws regarding ocean governance. However, the level of implementation of these legal frameworks varies, affected by the rule of law, institutional and technical capacities. Lack of data is also a major challenge as with some areas with ocean industrial activities are either not adequately tracked, regulated or monitored, including in South Asia, Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean, also affecting marine protected areas and World Heritage sites.[1.4]

Climate, environmental and biodiversity impacts are demanding urgent and immediate global solutions. The resource richness of the oceans and their important contribution to a safe climate and biodiversity globally has motivated a new series of projects, plans and investments, in what has been called a “blue economy”. Linked initiatives include blue carbon, establishing ocean, marine and coastal protected areas, and the potential extraction of critical minerals, among others. Some of these actions have been implemented without adequate safeguards and might be threatening human rights.

Guaranteeing strong and effective ocean governance is critical considering the importance of oceans, their status and threats. This is also important due to its direct connection to the enjoyment of all human rights, including the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment and healthy ecosystems and biodiversity. Therefore the Special Rapporteur aims to contribute to the implementation of this right by analysing the situation of oceans from a human rights perspective, identifying threats and challenges that States are facing in securing their protection, and identifying tools and solutions that can be implemented to effectively guarantee human rights, prioritising Indigenous Peoples, women and small scale fisherfolk, local communities, while also protecting and conserving oceans, the largest ecosystem on Earth.

Objectives

The report will contribute to understanding the state of oceans within the framework of human rights, in particular in relation to marginalized people, communities and groups. It will identify effective policies, frameworks, and solutions that States, businesses, international organisations, Indigenous Peoples, coastal communities, and civil society can implement to fulfil their rights and obligations, while restoring oceans and coastal areas and preventing further degradation. The report will advance adaptive, inclusive, and evidence-based management measures to reduce the vulnerability and cumulative impacts on oceans.

Key questions and types of input/comments sought

The Special Rapporteur welcomes inputs regarding the following themes:

  1. Information regarding effective measures, policies, and laws, for the protection, conservation, and restoration of oceans that incorporate ahuman rights approach.This includes measures based on the precautionary principleand other international law standards.
  2. Examples of best practices and suggested solutions of human rights-based approaches to the environmentally sustainable management of marine, coastal and oceans areas, and resources. This can include examples at national and regional level.
  3. Examples of how human rights related to the oceans have been fulfilled including through the protection of marginalised communities; including examples of community management of marine and coastal areas, restoring of ecosystems and fisheries, and the role and inclusion of Indigenous Peoples, women, children, and youth.
  4. Main challenges for the protection and prevention of damages to the ocean and coastal areas, in relation to the effective implementation of the human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment, including ongoing policies or efforts to overcome these.
  5. Information regarding frameworks, measures, or safeguards of the protection of the right to a healthy environment applicable to projects, plans or initiatives related with the conservation or protection of oceans, such as the creation of marine protected areas, protection of fisheries, blue carbon and development of projects and infrastructure.

If there is information that you have previously sent to other special procedures or human rights mechanisms that may be relevant, we urge you to share this as well.


1.1. IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability “Chapter 3: Oceans and Coastal Ecosystems and their Services” https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/chapter/chapter-3/

1.2. Richardson, K, Steffen, W., Wolfgang, L. et al. “Earth beyond six of nine planetary” in Science Advances, 13 Sep 2023 Vol 9, Issue 37 https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adh2458

1.3. Ditlevsen, P., Ditlevsen, S. Warning of a forthcoming collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. Nat Commun 14, 4254 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39810-w

1.4. Paolo, F.S., Kroodsma, D., Raynor, J. et al. Satellite mapping reveals extensive industrial activity at sea. Nature 625, 85–91 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06825-8 and McVeigh, K “Human activity is powering ‘a new industrial revolution’ at sea, say experts” in The Guardian 3 January 2024

Inputs Received
Inputs Received
States

Brazil

Chile

Colombia

Germany

Ireland

Malaysia

Mexico

Ministry of Environment of Lebanon

Poland

Qatar

Serbia

Slovenia

South Africa

Uzbekistan

Indigenous Peoples

Currie Country Social Change

Individuals

Claudio Klaus 

Emily Mitchell

Nathan Benneth: input-1 | input-2 | input-3 | input-4 | input-5 | input-6

Vedant Pathak

UN entities

Member of UN IATT WS6

UN Etxea - Association of the Basque Country for UNESCO

UNEP, Ecosystems division

UNFCCC secretariat

Regional mechanism

Council of Europe

Other

IUCN

CSOs

AIDA

Asian Research Institute for Environmental Law (ARIEL)

Asociación Interamericana para la Defensa del Ambiente (AIDA), ONG FIMA y Greenpeace Andino

Association of Reintegration of Crimea

Azul

Bismarck Ramu Group

Caribbean Environmental Law Unit, Faculty of Law, The University of West Indies

Centro para la Justicia Marina: input-1 | input-2 | input-3 | input-4 | input-5

CIEL

CIEL to SR Food

CIEL, the ECT Group and the Heinrich Boll Stiftung (jointly)

Conservación de Mamíferos Marinos de México

CoopeSoliDar: input-1 | input-2

Costa Humboldt

Deep Sea Conservation Coalition

Earthjustice’s International Program: input-1 | input-2

Earth Law Center 

Environmental Justice Foundation: input-1 | input-2 | input-3

FIAN Indonesia (jointly with KIARA, Ekomarin and FIAN Indonesia)

Franciscans International, the Anglican Communion and the Centre for Energy, Ecology and Development (CEED)

Fundación MarViva

Fundación Melimoyu

Gender and Climate Justice Circle, Society of Gender Professionals

Greenpeace International

Hogan Lovells and Blue Ventures

Inisiasi Masyarakat Adat (IMA)

Jubilee Australia Research Centre

LACLIMA’s International Climate Regime Working Group

Masifundise: input-1 | input-2 | input-3 | input-4 | input-5 | input-6 | input-7

My World Mexico

Natural Justice Southern Africa Hub

Natural Justice Mozambique and Southern Africa Hub

Observatorio Ciudadano, the Network of Indigenous Women for the Defense of the Sea (Red de Mujeres Originarias por la Defensa del Mar), and FIMA

Ocean Vision Legal

Oceana, México

Oceans North

Ojos de Mar Community Foundation, Chile

Opportunity Green

Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG)

Peruvian Society of Environmental Law (SPDA)

Pew Charitable Trusts

Seas At Risk

Solidar

US IUU Fishing & Labor Rights Coalition

WFFP (World Forum of Fisher Peoples)

World Benchmarking Alliance

World Wildlife Fund

Academia

Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and Security

CELENI

Clínica Jurídica Ambiental Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú

Freie University Berlin: input-1 | input-2 | input-3 | input-4 | input-5 | input-6 | input-7 | input-8

Global Human Rights Centre, University of Bedfordshire

Jean Monnet Chair, Federal University of Uberlândia, Global Crossings Project

Research Group in Critical International Law (DICRÍ/UFRGS), Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

University Antwerpen

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