1. INTRODUCTION
While the meaning of the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR) in the international climate change regime was relatively clear-cut under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)Footnote 1 and its Kyoto Protocol,Footnote 2 its significance under the Paris AgreementFootnote 3 to the UNFCCC is more nuanced, flexible and inchoate. According to the CBDR principle, all states have common environmental responsibilities,Footnote 4 but the manner in which each state meets its responsibilities should vary according to country-specific economic, historical, social and ecological variables.Footnote 5 Whereas the UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol codified this principle in the form of differential treatment in their central treaty obligations, including those pertaining to mitigation,Footnote 6 the Paris Agreement replaces top-down differentiation with regard to mitigation obligations with a new paradigm of bottom-up ‘self-differentiation’,Footnote 7 as parties select their own mitigation targets.Footnote 8 Despite the diminished role for the CBDR principle in relation to prescriptive substantive mitigation commitments under the Paris Agreement, this article posits that there is increasing scope for the CBDR principle to shape procedurally oriented implementation and support mechanisms under the Paris Agreement. In particular, CBDR will continue to play a pivotal role in the context of adaptation, finance and technology transfer, capacity building and compliance. However, the increasingly salient avenues for procedural differentiation will need to be buttressed by robust accountability mechanisms, including consequences for deficient performance,Footnote 9 to be effective. Currently, such accountability mechanisms are underdeveloped in this nascent phase of the Paris Agreement.
Insights from global administrative law (GAL) scholarshipFootnote 10 valuably inform this analysis. GAL scholarship highlights the desirability of global administrative action being circumscribed by mechanisms for accountability, transparency, participation, reason giving and review.Footnote 11 Stewart extends this argument by positing that ‘procedural regard’ for the interests of weaker actors can be promoted by these principles and practices.Footnote 12 Procedural regard is facilitated by an administrative framework in which relevant decision makers take into account the interests of affected actors in decision-making processesFootnote 13 – in this case, developing countries’ interests and needs with respect to treaty implementation. In contrast, substantive regard implies securing certain outcomes that are favourable to developing countries.Footnote 14 Building on this distinction, this article contends that the diminished influence of the CBDR principle in terms of substantive regard, which was previously guaranteed through top-down differentiation in central treaty obligations, is counterbalanced by an increasing – if as yet underdeveloped – scope for the CBDR principle to foster procedural regard for developing countries’ interests under the Paris Agreement. In this context, the experience of the procedurally differentiated regime of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from marine bunker fuels yields valuable lessons. The IMO’s approach has proved to be ineffective in promoting the interests of developing countries largely because it does not incorporate adequate accountability mechanisms. Such mechanisms are necessary to transform mere procedural opportunities for differentiation into a robust framework for procedural regard.
This article proceeds as follows. Section 2 provides a conceptual framework for substantive and procedural regard, and charts the demise of CBDR as a principle that prescriptively shapes substantive mitigation obligations in the international climate change regime. Section 3 analyzes the text of the Paris Agreement and identifies the ways in which it paves the way for a more proceduralized manifestation of the CBDR principle. Section 4 explores the similar trajectory of the CBDR principle in the IMO’s climate change mitigation regime, and draws lessons from this comparison. Concluding remarks are offered in Section 5.
2. SUBSTANTIVE AND PROCEDURAL REGARD IN THE UNFCCC AND ITS KYOTO PROTOCOL
The reconceptualization of the role of the CBDR principle in terms of substantive and procedural regard illustrates the value of insights from GAL as ‘essential’ componentsFootnote 15 of the developing field of transnational environmental law. GAL is an innovative branch of legal scholarship which argues that much of contemporary global governance can be conceptualized and analyzed as global administrative action.Footnote 16 GAL highlights the importance of new administrative law mechanisms in global regulatory governance,Footnote 17 in particular principles and practices that promote accountability, transparency, participation, reasoned decision making and review.Footnote 18 This article contends that these administrative mechanisms have significant potential to promote procedural regard for developing states’ interests under the Paris Agreement. However, their efficacy could be undermined by partial and uneven adoption.
According to Stewart, there is a ‘problem of disregard’ with respect to the interests of less powerful states and other marginalized actors in global regulatory bodies.Footnote 19 The problem of disregard describes the strong risk of bias in global regulatory regimes towards promoting the interests of the powerful and well resourced, while overlooking the interests and concerns of weaker groups and individuals.Footnote 20 Stewart proposes that administrative mechanisms have significant potential to redress this risk by being responsive to the interests of affected stakeholders.Footnote 21 He explains how regard can provide an antidote to the problem of disregard as follows:
As an ideal, regard requires that the decision-maker review available information about the effects of proposed decisions on the various groups, individuals, interests, and concerns entitled to consideration; weighs the benefits for and burdens on them of alternatives; and determines that decisions that impose disadvantage or harm on some affected groups and individuals are justified by relevant decisional norms.Footnote 22
This type of procedural regard can be contrasted with both procedural disregard, in which decision makers fail or refuse to have regard for affected actors’ interests,Footnote 23 and substantive regard, which implies outcomes that are favourable to weaker or vulnerable actors.Footnote 24 This latter distinction is central to the argument in this article, although it is acknowledged that in practice substantive regard can reinforce procedural regard, and vice versa.Footnote 25
There are a number of administrative mechanisms that can enhance procedural regard, only some of which are thus far evident in the Paris Agreement.Footnote 26 Stewart groups such mechanisms into three categories: ‘decision rules’, ‘accountability mechanisms’, and ‘other responsiveness-promoting measures’.Footnote 27 Decision rules govern which actors have the authority to vote or are otherwise vested with authoritative power in the decision-making process. Other responsiveness-promoting measures include, inter alia, measures for transparency, non-decisional participation and reason giving, which can be buttressed by review.Footnote 28 The regard-enhancing tool which is most pertinent to the argument in this article is accountability. Stewart favours a narrow definition of accountability, characterized by three structural elements:
(1) a specified accounter, who is subject to being called to provide account for his conduct; (2) a specified account holder who can require the accounter to render account; and (3) the ability and authority of the account holder to impose sanctions or other remedies for deficient performance.Footnote 29
This definition sees accountability as a discrete procedural tool, and can be contrasted with broader understandings which conceive of accountability as a conceptual umbrella.Footnote 30 The narrow approach to accountability, which is adopted in this article, can apply to states acting as administrative ‘agents’ responsible for implementing their commitments under the international climate change regime, and which are ultimately accountable to the state parties for compliance with their treaty obligations.Footnote 31 It is argued that the development of accountability mechanisms for states with respect to their mitigation and support commitments is vital for the success of the emerging framework for procedural regard under the Paris Agreement, but is at risk of being undermined by a paucity of remedies for deficient performance.Footnote 32
Stewart’s discussion of disregard for marginalized individuals and groups explicitly excludes the potential for global regulatory bodies to ‘disregard the interests and concerns of weaker states, especially developing-country states’.Footnote 33 This article expands upon Stewart’s analysis by contending that, in the international climate change regime, the CBDR principle has the potential to shape both substantive and procedural regard for the interests of developing states. The potential for procedural regard is most clearly evident in the Paris Agreement. Of course, developing states’ interests and capacities in the international climate change regime are not homogeneous; the interests of vulnerable least developed countries and small island countries diverge significantly from those of large developing economies such as China, India and Brazil, and from comparatively wealthy developing countries such as Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and South Korea.Footnote 34 Thus, when this article refers to developing states’ interests in relation to procedural regard, the focus is on those developing states that face genuine capacity constraints with respect to implementing their substantive obligations, albeit to varying degrees. These capacity constraints reflect ongoing economic and political disparities between developed and developing states which have origins in colonialism.Footnote 35 As Chayes and Handler Chayes note, developing countries’ implementation and compliance issues are generally attributable to ‘a severe dearth of the requisite scientific, technical, bureaucratic, and financial wherewithal to build effective domestic enforcement systems’.Footnote 36 The present analysis of procedural regard focuses on decision making that relates to the genuine capacity limitations of developing states.
Understanding differentiation in international environmental agreements in terms of its potential for fostering procedural and substantive regard creates an alternative categorization of differential treatment to those deployed in earlier writing. Rajamani, for example, outlines three primary ways in which to categorize differential treatment in international environmental law:
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∙ provisions that differentiate between industrial and developing countries with respect to the central obligations contained in the treaty, such as emissions reduction targets;
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∙ provisions that differentiate between industrial and developing countries with respect to implementation, such as delayed compliance schedules, permission to adopt subsequent base years, delayed reporting schedules, and soft approaches to non-compliance; and
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∙ provisions that grant assistance, inter alia, financial and technological.Footnote 37
This article extends and complements Rajamani’s categorization by analyzing the changing prominence of these categories in terms of the shifting traction of opportunities for substantive and procedural regard in the Paris Agreement.Footnote 38
In tracing this shifting trajectory, it is logical to begin with an evaluation of substantive and procedural regard in the UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol. Against the backdrop of the North–South divide,Footnote 39 and reflecting the growing prominence of the CBDR principle before and after the Rio Earth Summit in 1992,Footnote 40 differential treatment for developing countries is enshrined in the central treaty obligations of the UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol, which is unique among global multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs).Footnote 41 In the 1992 UNFCCC, all parties have procedural obligations to publish national emissions inventories and to formulate, publish and regularly update national and regional programmes containing mitigation measures.Footnote 42 However, only Annex I industrialized countriesFootnote 43 are required to adopt national mitigation policies to limit GHG emissions and protect and enhance sinks and reservoirs, with the aim of reducing overall GHG emissions to 1990 levels.Footnote 44 Thus, the primary mitigation burden under the UNFCCC falls upon industrialized countries. Accordingly, this Convention evidences obligations that are favourable to developing states and hence reflect substantive regard.
The Kyoto Protocol was adopted at the third Conference of the Parties (COP) in 1997 to strengthen the relatively broad and vague commitments in the original Framework Convention. The Kyoto Protocol mirrors the UNFCCC’s asymmetric approach to developed and developing state parties. The Protocol committed industrialized countries to achieve differentiated, legally binding overall emissions targets of at least 5% below 1990 levels in the first commitment period from 2008 to 2012. In contrast, developing countries were required only to meet certain procedural obligations, such as reporting. The Kyoto Protocol thus perpetuated and further entrenched the UNFCCC’s substantive regard for the interests of developing states. Indeed, as Rajamani notes, the Kyoto Protocol represents ‘the high-water mark of differential treatment’ in international environmental law.Footnote 45
The starkly differentiated substantive mitigation obligations in the Kyoto Protocol are complemented by a well-developed framework for procedural regard which allows developing states’ interests to be factored into decision-making processes within the regime. For example, the Kyoto Protocol’s Compliance Committee was established as the body responsible for resolving compliance issues and determining the consequences of non-compliance.Footnote 46 The Committee comprises two branches – the Enforcement Branch and the Facilitative Branch – which reflect a unique dual focus on enforcing and promoting compliance.Footnote 47 The Enforcement Branch has a mandate to take relatively strong measuresFootnote 48 in response to questions of implementation involving industrialized state parties’ emissions reduction commitments and related reporting and eligibility requirements, ‘taking into account the cause, type, degree and frequency of the non-compliance of that Party’.Footnote 49 In contrast, the Facilitative Branch is tasked with advising and facilitating implementation for all parties,Footnote 50 taking into account the principle of ‘common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capacities’.Footnote 51 Only the Facilitative Branch of the Compliance Committee was intended to apply to developing countriesFootnote 52 and, to date, this branch has had limited practical relevance for all countries.Footnote 53
Significantly, both the Enforcement and Facilitative Branches represent decision-making forums that are constrained by extensive due process guarantees.Footnote 54 Once a non-compliance issue has been referred to either branch, the rights afforded to the relevant party include:Footnote 55
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∙ making information available to the party concerned and requiring notifications to be sent to the party at the different stages of the process;Footnote 56
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∙ allowing the party the opportunity to comment in writing on all information considered by the relevant branch, as well as on any decisions;Footnote 57
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∙ permitting the party to designate persons to represent it during the consideration of the question of implementation by the relevant branch;Footnote 58
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∙ allowing written submissions, including rebuttal, from the party;Footnote 59 and
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∙ providing the party with a hearing, to be held in public unless otherwise decided, where it may present its views, and expert testimony or opinion.Footnote 60
Compared with other MEA compliance systems, this represents an extensive range of procedural safeguards for parties called to account for their performance under the Kyoto Protocol.Footnote 61
The due process guarantees in the Facilitative and Enforcement Branches are consonant with procedural regard in a number of ways. Firstly, these forums promote accountability by requiring states to account for their compliance with their multilateral environmental commitments, and for consequences to be considered and imposed in the event of non-compliance.Footnote 62 In the Facilitative Branch, such consequences are relatively ‘soft’ and include the provision of advice regarding implementation, financial and technical assistance, and the formulation of recommendations.Footnote 63 The remedies available to the Enforcement Branch are significantly more intrusive and include the requirement of a ‘compliance action plan’ for remedying non-compliance with methodological and reporting requirements,Footnote 64 state suspension from participating in the Protocol’s flexibility mechanismsFootnote 65 if the non-compliance issue concerns the eligibility requirements,Footnote 66 and deductions from future emissions allocations if a party’s emissions target is exceeded.Footnote 67 Thus, the accountability requirements of a forum in which states are answerable for their conduct, with potential sanctions for deficient performance, are satisfied.Footnote 68 Secondly, such guarantees promote participation by and dialogue withFootnote 69 affected parties, and the transparency of the compliance process. These measures correspond with the non-decisional participation and transparency measures Stewart categorizes under ‘other responsiveness-promoting measures’.Footnote 70 Thirdly, a party may appeal to the COP serving as the Meeting of the Parties against a decision of the Enforcement Branch if it believes it has been denied due process and the decision ‘relates to’ Article 3(1) of the Kyoto Protocol regarding national emissions targets,Footnote 71 which provides a limited avenue for review. Thus, both branches of the Compliance Committee provide forums for holding states to account for their commitments, which are constrained by numerous administrative mechanisms, evidencing procedural regard.Footnote 72
Despite, or perhaps because of, the Kyoto Protocol’s innovations in terms of differentiation in central mitigation obligations and the creation of procedurally constrained Enforcement and Facilitative Branches in the Compliance Committee, little of the Kyoto Protocol’s architecture is evident in the Paris Agreement.Footnote 73 These changes are at least in part attributable to ongoing debates and contestation about the appropriate role for the CBDR principle in the international climate change regime.Footnote 74 For developing and developed countries alike, achieving deep GHG emissions cuts poses financial, regulatory and technical capacity challenges,Footnote 75 and key players such as the United States (US) have continued to resist accepting binding mitigation commitments unless developing countries ‘meaningfully participate’ in climate mitigation efforts.Footnote 76 This is perhaps not surprising given that large developing countries such as Brazil, China and India rank among the world’s top ten contributors to cumulative global emissions.Footnote 77 Against this backdrop, there was diminishing support among some states for the Kyoto Protocol and its top-down ‘prescriptive, quantitative, time-bound, compliance-backed approach’ to mitigation for industrialized countries only.Footnote 78 The Kyoto Protocol’s demise coincided with a renewed enthusiasm for forging a new agreement under the UNFCCC that would have universal coverage and prioritize decentralized, bottom-up selection of national mitigation targets and actions, reinforced by rigorous reporting frameworks.Footnote 79 This paradigm shift is reflected in the Paris Agreement, which is premised on nationally determined contributions (NDCs) rather than centrally imposed targets that differentiate between developed and developing state parties.
3. PROCEDURALLY ORIENTED DIFFERENTIATION IN THE PARIS AGREEMENT
An analysis of the Paris Agreement shows a relative dearth of provisions that guarantee substantive regard for developing states’ mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage interests. However, a variety of provisions lay the foundation for a framework for procedural regard to support the implementation by developing states of their substantive commitments. Yet, this procedurally oriented differentiation risks being ultimately unsuccessful in achieving common mitigation and adaptation goals if it is not supported by finance, technology transfer and capacity-building commitments from developed states that are robust, quantifiable, and for which they will be held to account.
The binary distinction between developed and developing countries’ mitigation obligations under the Kyoto Protocol has not been replicated under the Paris Agreement. While developing state parties did not have legally binding emissions targets under the Kyoto Protocol, the Paris Agreement imposes a collective general obligation on all state parties to hold ‘the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels’.Footnote 80 This commitment is to be achieved through successive and progressively strengthened NDCs of state parties.Footnote 81 In this context, developed countries should continue to take the lead through economy-wide absolute emissions reduction targets.Footnote 82 Developing countries should also make mitigation efforts and are encouraged to adopt economy-wide emissions reduction targets in the future in the light of national circumstances.Footnote 83 States’ obligations are binding with respect to fulfilling procedural requirements to prepare, communicate, maintain and periodically report national contributions and pursue domestic mitigation measures,Footnote 84 rather than in relation to the substantive achievement of mitigation targets.Footnote 85 Thus, the Kyoto Protocol’s rigid, top-down bifurcation between the mitigation targets of industrialized and developing countries has been replaced by bottom-up self-differentiationFootnote 86 and procedurally oriented obligations for implementing the Paris Agreement.
The move towards self-differentiation is highly questionable to the extent that it is premised on the understanding that the 1992 UNFCCC division between industrialized and developing countries is no longer justifiable because the ‘material circumstances have changed, sometimes dramatically, in the intervening years and will keep changing in the years ahead’.Footnote 87 As the Paris Agreement is an instrument under the UNFCCC, which enshrines the CBDR principle in Article 3(1), the Paris Agreement should be interpreted consistently with this and other principles in the UNFCCC. However, there is a view that as ‘economic and political realities have evolved’ since the negotiation of the UNFCCC in 1992, the CBDR principle should be interpreted flexibly in the light of these changing circumstances.Footnote 88 Despite the significant economic growth of ‘emerging economies’ such as Brazil, Chile, China, India, Mexico and South Korea, it is important not to overstate the extent of these changes as ‘these economies are not in the same position as countries whose economies were industrialized much earlier’.Footnote 89 Moreover, the ongoing and extensive challenges of extreme poverty and hunger that continue to affect millions of people in so-called leading developing countries like China and India should not be underestimated.Footnote 90 Expecting greater parallelism between states with unequal capacities may ultimately frustrate the mitigation aims of the new international climate change agreement.Footnote 91
As with mitigation, the Paris Agreement does not substantively differentiate between developed and developing countries’ commitments with respect to adaptation, or loss and damage. The Agreement characterizes adaptation as a ‘global challenge faced by all’, although the urgent needs of developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to climate change are acknowledged.Footnote 92 It establishes a global goal for adaptation of ‘enhancing adaptive capacity, strengthening resilience and reducing vulnerability to climate change’.Footnote 93 All parties are obliged to engage in adaptation planning and implementation of adaptation actions,Footnote 94 which are again obligations with respect to the procedural steps required, rather than the outcomes of these measures. Thus, there is no substantive differentiation between the obligations imposed on developed and developing states, yet the Agreement does provide for continuous and enhanced support for developing countries for the development and implementation of adaptation plans, and the preparation of adaptation communications.Footnote 95
Although industrialized developed countries are predominantly responsible for loss and damage arising from climate change, Article 8 of the Paris Agreement imposes no specific, binding obligations on these countries.Footnote 96 Rather, the Agreement recognizes the importance of enhancing understanding, action and support for addressing loss and damage as a result of climate change on a cooperative and facilitative basis, including through the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage Associated with Climate Change Impacts, as appropriate.Footnote 97 The parties have agreed that the inclusion of these provisions in the Agreement ‘does not involve or provide a basis for any liability or compensation’ for loss and damage as a result of climate change.Footnote 98 In relation to loss and damage, therefore, the absence of binding, quantifiable obligations effectively forecloses opportunities for guaranteeing substantive regard for the interests of developing states.
Developed states are urged to demonstrate leadership in supporting developing states to meet their largely procedurally oriented implementation commitments through finance, technology and capacity-building support. The Agreement obligates developed countries to provide financial resources to developing countries,Footnote 99 and to take the lead in mobilizing and progressively increasing funds for climate finance.Footnote 100 The COP decision accompanying the Paris Agreement specifies that a quantified, collective goal for climate finance, scaled-up from a floor of US$100 billion per year, is to be agreed before 2025.Footnote 101 Prior to this, developed countries intend to continue to work towards their existing collective goal of mobilizing the US$100 billion per year agreed at Cancun in 2010.Footnote 102 Developed countries are required to submit biennial communications indicating quantitative and qualitative information regarding climate finance, including the ‘projected level of public financial resources provided to developing country parties’.Footnote 103 These funds will be managed and disbursed by the Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC.Footnote 104 Moreover, the Agreement provides for financial support for developing countries for technology development and transfer through the UNFCCC Technology Mechanism,Footnote 105 and urges developed country parties to enhance support for capacity building in developing countriesFootnote 106 – the institutional arrangements for capacity building will be decided at the first COP serving as the meeting of the parties to the Paris Agreement.Footnote 107 Thus, developing countries may apply for financial, technology and capacity-building support from the relevant institutional body serving the Paris Agreement.
The above-mentioned avenues for developing states to apply for assistance provide opportunities for country-specific circumstances to be taken into account in decisions about treaty implementation, which is prima facie consonant with procedural regard. To maximize opportunities for procedural regard, the procedures shaping and constraining these decision-making processes need to hold states to account for their commitments, be transparent, encourage participation by affected state actors, and be accompanied by written reasons and review mechanisms.Footnote 108 The ‘transparency framework for action and support’ specified in Article 13 of the Paris Agreement goes some way towards achieving this by recognizing the need for greater transparency in relation to information on both mitigation action and support, which will be subject to technical expert reviewFootnote 109 to build trust and confidence between parties.Footnote 110 The provisions in Article 13 facilitate procedural differentiation by taking into account the national capabilities and circumstances of developing country parties in implementing the transparency framework.Footnote 111
Three key oversight mechanisms provided for in the Paris Agreement are ‘multilateral consideration of progress’,Footnote 112 ‘global stocktakes’,Footnote 113 and non-compliance processes.Footnote 114 Each party is expected to participate in a ‘facilitative, multilateral consideration of progress’ with respect to the implementation and achievement of its mitigation contributions and, for developed country parties, their efforts in providing financial resources to assist developing countries.Footnote 115 The purpose of the global stocktake held every five years is to ‘assess the collective progress towards achieving the purpose of this Agreement and its long term goals’.Footnote 116 It is as yet unclear how the ‘facilitative, multilateral consideration of progress’ will be conducted, what its outcomes will be, and how it will feed into the global stocktake.Footnote 117 The emphasis on collective progress in the global stocktake suggests that states will not individually be held to account for their actions.Footnote 118
The oversight mechanisms provided for in the Paris Agreement partially contribute to creating a procedurally constrained space for administrative action under the regime; however, there is a notable lacuna in relation to consequences for failing to comply with obligations, which is an important element of accountability.Footnote 119 While binding procedural requirements are specified in the Paris Agreement, there are no prescriptive mitigation, adaptation, or loss and damage targets, and there are no quantified and time-bound goals in relation to finance, technology and capacity-building support. Although the Paris Agreement highlights the need for developed states to assist developing, least developed and small island countries, and signals that scaled-up financial commitments beyond previous efforts are mandatory,Footnote 120 the lack of precision in these obligations limits the extent to which developed states can be held to account for honouring their commitments. As will be shown in the following section, soft and vague commitments in relation to financial and technology transfer that are not buttressed by strong accountability mechanisms are at high risk of being ineffective.
Similar issues arise in relation to the Compliance Mechanism, which will be established to provide a forum for facilitating improved performance by states if they do not comply with provisions under the Agreement. The Paris Agreement’s Compliance Mechanism appears likely to operate in a similar way to the Facilitative Branch under the Kyoto ProtocolFootnote 121 – as previously noted, the Enforcement Branch model has not been replicated in this new agreement. The modalities and procedures for this mechanism will be adopted by the COP serving as the meeting of the parties to the Paris Agreement in 2016.Footnote 122 However, the Paris Agreement specifies that the compliance committee will be ‘expert-based and facilitative in nature’, and is required to ‘pay particular attention to the respective national capabilities and circumstances of Parties’.Footnote 123 Accordingly, the Paris Agreement’s compliance framework appears likely to represent a new procedurally constrained forum for enhancing procedural regard for the interests of developing states in regime decision-making processes, without guaranteeing favourable substantive outcomes.
An important aspect of accountability is the imposition of ‘sanctions or other remedies for deficient performance’,Footnote 124 drawing into question the efficacy of a purely ‘facilitative’, ‘non-adversarial’ and ‘non-punitive’ approach to compliance.Footnote 125 Apart from public ‘naming and shaming’, non-compliant state parties are likely to face limited concrete consequences.Footnote 126 In the absence of intrusive consequences for non-compliance, such as trade suspensions and the deprivation of other rights and privileges under the treaty,Footnote 127 questions can be raised about the adequacy of this compliance system to effect significant behavioural changes,Footnote 128 and thus to provide a strong accountability mechanism as part of a robust framework for procedural regard. For optimal utility, the nascent opportunities for procedurally oriented differentiation in the Paris Agreement need to be reinforced by a comprehensive suite of administrative mechanisms, including consequences for non-compliance, to hold states to account for their mitigation and support commitments.
4. LESSONS TO BE LEARNED FROM THE IMO REGIME FOR REDUCTION OF GHG EMISSIONS FROM SHIPS
As the Paris Agreement is in its infancy and has not yet legally entered into force, it is too early to holistically evaluate the emergent procedurally oriented framework for differentiation between developed and developing countries. This section turns to the IMO regime for the reduction of GHG emissions from ships in order to explore insights and transferable lessons for the Paris Agreement. Like the Paris Agreement, the IMO regime emphasizes procedural, rather than substantive, avenues for promoting developing countries’ interests. It is argued that, despite some important differences between the two regimes, there are lessons for the development of the administrative apparatus operationalizing the Paris Agreement that can be learned from the IMO’s failure to effectively embed procedural regard through the development of robust accountability mechanisms.
The UNFCCC and Paris Agreement share both similarities and differences with the IMO regime. The UNFCCC and the IMO have parallel membership – all 171 current members of the IMOFootnote 129 have ratified the UNFCCC,Footnote 130 and there is consensus among UNFCCC members on the adoption of the Paris Agreement. Protection of the environment falls within the remit of both regimes;Footnote 131 however, the IMO’s mandate is significantly broader and encompasses responsibilities for setting standards for the prevention of pollution and ensuring the safety and security of international maritime transportation systems.Footnote 132 The emphasis on the CBDR principle in the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol contrasts starkly with the IMO principles of non-discrimination and no more-favourable treatment with respect to the universal application of adopted measures. This means that, irrespective of the flag or ownership of the ship, IMO measures are binding upon all parties.Footnote 133 The Paris Agreement’s approach to self-differentiated mitigation targets bears more similarities to the IMO approach than the Kyoto Protocol’s stance on differential treatment. Yet, unlike the IMO, the Paris Agreement does not impose equal mitigation targets upon all parties. Thus, despite overlapping memberships and environmental protection remits, the approach to differential treatment in the IMO and climate change regimes diverges significantly.
The two regimes are strongly linked as Article 2(2) of the Kyoto Protocol obligates developed countries to work through the IMO to reduce GHG emissions from shipping.Footnote 134 According to a study conducted by the IMO, which considered data between 2007 and 2012, the maritime transport sector is responsible for more than 3% of annual global CO2 emissions.Footnote 135 Further, emissions from shipping are anticipated to grow by 50% to 250% by 2050.Footnote 136 Almost 14 years after the adoption of the Kyoto Protocol, in 2011 the Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) of the IMO adopted an amendment to Annex VI of the 1973 International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL),Footnote 137 which introduced an Energy Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) for new ships and a Ship Energy Efficiency Management Plan (SEEMP) for new and existing ships.Footnote 138 These technical measures are not, by themselves, sufficient to significantly reduce emissions from ships, and the IMO is currently considering further technical and market-based measures to achieve this goal.Footnote 139
As with the negotiations for the Paris Agreement, the appropriate role for the CBDR principle has been highly contentious in the IMO negotiations on reducing GHG emissions from the maritime sector.Footnote 140 As noted above, the IMO adheres to the principle of non-discrimination between states, and accordingly IMO technical regulations apply to ships flying the flag of all state parties.Footnote 141 However, as Article 2(2) of the Kyoto Protocol entrusts the IMO with the task of pursuing emissions reduction from marine bunker fuels, some developing countries have argued strenuously that the measures adopted by the IMO should be congruent with the principles established by the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol, especially the CBDR principle, to ‘ensure coherence and consistency with the climate change regime’.Footnote 142 Despite strong objections from some developing countries – including Brazil, China, India and Saudi Arabia – IMO member states decided to make the EEDI and SEEMP emissions reduction measures applicable to all ships irrespective of their nationality. This is a significant departure from the CBDR principle as reflected in the UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol.Footnote 143
The understanding ultimately reached in the IMO negotiations was that the CBDR principle would be implemented through procedural mechanisms to support implementation rather than through imposing differentiated substantive obligations.Footnote 144 Accordingly, the amended MARPOL provides that ‘[a]dministrations shall, in co-operation with the Organization and other international bodies, promote and provide, as appropriate, support directly or through the Organization to States, especially developing States, that request technical assistance’.Footnote 145 This regulation does not impose a direct obligation for the transfer of technology and assistance from developed to developing states, but rather creates a framework whereby developing states may request such assistance. Requests from developing states for technology and funding assistance, in order to facilitate compliance with new technical and operational guidelines, are taken into account in the administration of the regime, which prima facie provides an opportunity for procedural regard.
Despite this potential, this approach has led to a deadlock in the IMO negotiations because of non-cooperation on the part of developed countries in providing funds and transfer of technology to developing states.Footnote 146 After the adoption of the 2011 amendment to MARPOL, developing countries expressed their reservations about further negotiations for market-based measures until a consensus on proper arrangements for technical assistance for implementation of existing measures became evident.Footnote 147 After fraught debates, state parties finally agreed to adopt a resolution on the promotion of technical cooperation and transfer of technology in 2013.Footnote 148 However, this new resolution does not establish a legally binding arrangement in which developed countries are obliged to provide financial and technical assistance in return for acceptance by developing countries of similar substantive climate change mitigation commitments.Footnote 149
Thus, in the IMO’s climate change regime, developed countries have shown reluctance to frame and implement an adequate system to support developing countries in achieving their equal mitigation obligations. The 2013 resolution on technical assistance was adopted only after some leading developing countries took the position that no further discussion on market-based or additional technical measures for mitigation would continue without a resolution on technical assistance and technology transfer to support existing measures. Despite these efforts, the IMO resolution on technical assistance in fact failed to materially change the previous ineffective arrangements. The resolution urges or requests those member states that are able to provide technical assistance, yet the non-mandatory technology transfer commitments contain many caveats. These qualifications include that the transfer of technology ‘needs to respect property rights, including intellectual property rights, and to be on mutually agreed terms and conditions’,Footnote 150 and is subject to the national laws, regulations and policies of the country providing assistance.Footnote 151 The end result is that both developing and developed countries have the same substantive mitigation obligations, but the administrative apparatus for the implementation of the CBDR principle is being undermined by unsatisfactory levels of financial and technical assistance provided by developed states.
Inadequate accountability mechanisms appear to have contributed to the failure of the IMO’s procedurally differentiated processes. During the negotiations regarding the 2013 resolution on technical assistance, the developing countries of Angola, China, Jamaica, Nigeria, South Africa and Venezuela stated that ‘the effective implementation by developed country Parties of their commitments on transfer of technology is inherently linked to the extent to which developing country Parties are required to implement their own commitments’, and stressed the need for the creation of a clear accountability framework with a robust reporting and evaluation procedure for facilitating technology transfer and assistance.Footnote 152 Similarly, India raised serious concerns that the 2013 resolution would not be successful without an effective mechanism for monitoring implementation:
We are still apprehensive of the extent to which the spirit of this resolution is going to be transformed to reality. Hence, India strongly requests the Organization to put in place effective mechanisms to continuously assess and monitor the effectiveness of implementation of this resolution, so that the support materially reaches the entitled developing nations.Footnote 153
These developing country perspectives indicate a view that the implementation challenges associated with both the 2011 amendment to MARPOL and the 2013 resolution on technical assistance are attributable to a dearth of effective accountability mechanisms. Conceptually, this point is reinforced by Stewart’s argument regarding the importance of accountability as a key regard-enhancing mechanism.Footnote 154 Thus, both developing country perspectives expressed during the IMO negotiations and the elements of procedural regard support the desirability of robust accountability arrangements.
In developing the implementation and compliance framework for the Paris Agreement, much can be learned from the IMO experience regarding the importance of strong mechanisms for holding developed states to account for their support obligations, which will significantly bolster emerging opportunities for procedural regard. This is significant as in the current absence of precise, binding commitments, the implementation of the general obligations for climate change mitigation and adaptation imposed upon all state parties under the Paris Agreement primarily relies upon the goodwill of developed states in providing financial, technical and capacity-building support to developing states. The provisions relating to the enhanced transparency framework for action and support discussed in Section 3 go some way towards providing mechanisms to promote the implementation of developed states’ financial and technical assistance commitments, in addition to all parties’ mitigation commitments. In the light of the foregoing analysis, serious questions arise as to whether a framework predicated on transparency, expert review, collective oversight and facilitative non-compliance processes will be sufficiently robust to achieve the Agreement’s mitigation and support aims in the absence of strong consequences for non-compliance with states’ commitments.
The stakes for failure are significantly higher in the Paris Agreement than the IMO climate change regime. In the latter regime, the reluctance of developed countries to provide financial and technical assistance to developing states after achieving their goal of common mitigation obligations has not had a direct deleterious impact on the global economy. This is because the IMO’s technical and operational measures are relatively modest and do not increase the cost of operating ships exponentially as EEDI and SEEMP also create energy-saving opportunities.Footnote 155 However, the context of the Paris Agreement differs markedly. The substantive mitigation obligations shared by all countries are likely to significantly impact on economic progress and sustainable development in developing countries, in particular, because of their existing capacity constraints. If developed countries do not fulfil their financial, technology transfer and capacity-building commitments in good faith, this will have far-reaching and negative consequences for developing countries and lead to widespread non-compliance, as has been evident in the IMO.Footnote 156 Moreover, in addition to mitigation, the Paris Agreement is dealing with important issues of adaptation and loss and damage, which also require support from developed countries. Accordingly, the IMO’s experience stemming from inadequate accountability mechanisms for developed states’ financial and technical assistance commitments provides a valuable cautionary tale for the development of the administrative apparatus for the Paris Agreement.
5. CONCLUSION
The Paris Agreement is a symbol of the evolving influence of the CBDR principle in international environmental legal instruments. In particular, it exemplifies the increasing scope for this principle to shape procedurally oriented mechanisms for facilitating support for the implementation by developing countries of their substantive obligations. In relation to both mitigation action and support, the Paris Agreement evidences latent, but as yet unrealized, potential for developing a comprehensive framework for procedural regard. As the IMO experience highlights, the emergence of a proceduralized framework for taking into account the interests of developing states in the administration of the regime creates a high risk of non-implementation of climate change mitigation obligations if there is a lack of financial, technical and capacity-building support for these states. Thus, in order to prevent a hastened demise of the utility of the CBDR principle in the international climate change regime, procedural avenues for implementation support for developing countries need to be reinforced by strong accountability mechanisms for all states’ mitigation commitments and developed states’ support commitments. In this way, the potential for the proceduralization of differential treatment to develop into a robust framework for procedural regard for the interests of developing states may be realized.