- Kosovo players walk off in Romania game after 'Serbia' chants
- Lame-duck Biden tries to reassure allies as Trump looms
- Nervy Irish edge Argentina in Test nailbiter
- Ronaldo at double as Portugal reach Nations League quarters, Spain win
- Fitch upgrades Argentina debt rating amid economic pain
- Trump picks Doug Burgum as energy czar in new administration
- Phone documentary details struggles of Afghan women under Taliban
- Ronaldo shines as Portugal rout Poland to reach Nations League last-eight
- Spain beat Denmark to seal Nations League group win
- Former AFCON champions Ghana bow out as minnows Comoros qualify
- Poland, Britain reach BJK Cup quarter-finals
- At summit under Trump shadow, Xi and Biden signal turbulence ahead
- Lebanon said studying US truce plan for Israel-Hezbollah war
- Xi warns against 'protectionism' at APEC summit under Trump cloud
- Nigerian UN nurse escapes jihadist kidnappers after six years
- India in record six-hitting spree to rout South Africa
- George tells England to prepare for rugby 'war' against Springboks
- Pogba's Juve contract terminated despite doping ban reduction
- Ukraine slams Scholz after first call with Putin in two years
- Michael Johnson's Grand Slam Track series to have LA final
- Kagiyama, Yoshida put Japan on top at Finland Grand Prix
- Alcaraz eyeing triumphant Davis Cup farewell for Nadal after ATP Finals exit
- Xi, Biden at Asia-Pacific summit under Trump trade war cloud
- India go on record six-hitting spree against South Africa
- France skipper Dupont says All Blacks 'back to their best'
- Trump pressures US Senate with divisive cabinet picks
- Bagnaia strikes late in Barcelona practice to edge title rival Martin
- High-ball hero Steward ready to 'front up' against South Africa
- Leader of Spain flood region admits 'mistakes'
- Swiatek, Linette take Poland past Spain into BJK Cup quarter-finals
- Leftist voices seek to be heard at Rio's G20 summit
- Wales coach Jenkins urges players to 'get back on the horse'
- Zverev reaches ATP Finals last four, Alcaraz out
- Boeing strike will hurt Ethiopian Airlines growth: CEO
- Springboks skipper Kolisi wary of England's 'gifted' Smith
- End of a love affair: news media quit X over 'disinformation'
- US finalizes up to $6.6 bn funding for chip giant TSMC
- Scholz urges Ukraine talks in first call with Putin since 2022
- Zverev reaches ATP Finals last four, Alcaraz on brink of exit
- Lebanon rescuer picks up 'pieces' of father after Israel strike
- US retail sales lose steam in October after hurricanes
- Zverev reaches ATP Finals last four with set win against Alcaraz
- Kerevi back for Australia against Wales, Suaalii on bench
- Spate of child poisoning deaths sparks S.Africa xenophobia
- Comedian Conan O'Brien to host Oscars
- Rozner overtakes McIlroy and Hatton for Dubai lead
- Mourners bid farewell to medic killed in east Ukraine
- Gore says 'absurd' to hold UN climate talks in petrostates
- Hamas says 'ready for ceasefire' as Israel presses Gaza campaign
- Amorim says Man Utd is 'where I'm supposed to be'
Small islands take ocean protection case to UN court
Leaders of nine small island states turned to the UN maritime court on Monday to seek protection of the world's oceans from catastrophic climate change that threatens the very existence of entire countries.
The island states are asking the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) to determine if carbon dioxide emissions absorbed by the oceans can be considered pollution, and if so, what obligations countries have to prevent it.
"This is the opening chapter in the struggle to change the conduct of the international community by clarifying the obligation of states to protect the marine environment," said the prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Gaston Browne.
"The time has come to speak in terms of legally binding obligations rather than empty promises that go unfulfilled," he told the court based in Hamburg, Germany.
The joint counsel representing the islands, Catherine Amirfar, said the point was to force countries to implement substantive measures against climate change.
"We're here to discuss what are the necessary, concrete, specific steps that they must take as a matter of law, not political discretion. That's key and... a big part of the answer," she told journalists.
Ocean ecosystems create half the oxygen humans breathe and limit global warming by absorbing much of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activities.
But increasing emissions can warm and acidify seawaters, harming marine life.
At the heart of the case is the international treaty UNCLOS that binds countries to preventing pollution of the oceans.
The UN treaty defines pollution as the introduction by humans of "substances or energy into the marine environment" that harms marine life.
But it does not spell out carbon emissions as a specific pollutant, and the plaintiffs argue that these emissions should qualify.
- Beyond 'charity' -
The push for climate justice won a big boost in March when the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution calling on the International Court of Justice to lay out nations' obligations on protecting the Earth's climate and the legal consequences they face for failing to do so.
The ICJ's advice is still pending but the action has opened up a new front to bind countries to pledges on reducing emissions.
The move at the UN had been led by Vanuatu, one of the island nations that brought Monday's case before the ITLOS.
Small islands like Vanuatu are particularly exposed to the impact of global warming, with seawater rises posing an existential threat.
"Just a few years -- this is all we have before the ocean consumes everything my people built across centuries," Tuvalu's Prime Minister Kausea Natano told the court.
"If international law has nothing to say about an entire country going underwater... then what purpose does it serve?" he said, pleading for a clear direction from the court.
Browne also voiced frustration at the attitude of some major nations when it comes to funding climate change mitigation or prevention.
When "large polluters contribute towards various funds, they believe it's an act of charity," he said at a press conference, adding that a successful outcome would tell them that "they have legal obligations".
- Marine heatwave -
Concrete measures, according to Vanuatu's attorney-general Arnold Loughman, could include halting deep-sea drilling for oil.
"It's time to come up with solutions and ways of stopping these countries from continuing to drill," he said.
Across the two-thirds of the planet covered by seas, nearly 60 percent of surface waters experienced at least one marine heatwave in 2022, according to the annual State of the Climate report led by scientists from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
This is 50 percent more than pre-industrial levels and "the highest in the modern atmospheric record and in paleoclimate records dating back as far as 800,000 years", according to the report, published this month.
The world's oceans set a new temperature record in August, with average sea surface temperatures reaching 21 degrees Celsius (69.8 Fahrenheit) for over a week, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service.
The other island states joining the ITLOS case are the Bahamas, Niue, Palau, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, while another 34 state parties will participate in the court hearing.
N.Fournier--BTB