Assessing the Impacts of the Climate Change Advisory Opinions

Wed Mar 25 2026 at 06:15 pm to 07:30 pm UTC+00:00

Alison Richard Building (Rooms SG1/SG2) | Cambridge

Renatus Otto Franz Derler
Publisher/HostRenatus Otto Franz Derler
Assessing the Impacts of the Climate Change Advisory Opinions
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About this Event

Assessing the Impacts of the Climate Change Advisory Opinions

In a matter of a few years, three international courts issued groundbreaking advisory opinions on climate change. An initial advisory opinion by the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) that focused on climate-related obligations under the Law of the Sea Convention in 2024 was followed by advisory opinions by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR) on climate-related human rights obligations, and an advisory opinion by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) clarifying the obligations of states in addressing climate change and the legal consequences of breaching such obligations. The contents of these three advisory opinions, as well as the proceedings leading up to them, have already been the subject of extensive commentary by scholars and practitioners.


What has received less attention, beyond some basic commentary on the effects of advisory opinions in general, is the range of specific impact of these opinions may bring about and the channels through which such impact may be sought. This is particularly important in a geopolitical context where environmental protection seems to have been downgraded in the list of political priorities, at least in the short term. An initial focus has been on monitoring whether and how the advisory opinions have been or could be referred to by litigants and judicial bodies at the domestic and regional level (e.g., the European Court of Human Rights’ reference to the ICJ Advisory Opinion in its Greenpeace Nordic v. Norway ruling). Some attention has also been paid to references to the outcomes of the advisory opinions in multilateral processes, such as the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations.

However, the impacts of advisory opinions are likely to go well beyond these first-order effects. More specifically, several impacts of advisory opinions can be distinguished, including impacts on:

  • specific actors and actor groups, such as states, corporations, courts, subnational authorities, social movements, etc.
  • litigation, including on litigation strategies, courts’ reasoning, litigation risk, etc.
  • policy processes, including multilateral negotiations under the UN (including both the substance of outcomes of these negotiations, as well as the process itself), international cooperative initiatives, and national policy processes (e.g., the development of new Nationally Determined Contributions, adaptation strategies, environmental impact assessment, ESG reporting).
  • market practices, including litigation insurance premiums, contractual terms, structuring of financial instruments (e.g. green bonds), product design standards, etc.


In addition, the impacts can also be distinguished into direct/indirect, intended/unintended, and strengthening/weakening climate action. Going beyond typologies, however, there is a need to better understand how these various types of impacts can be assessed. Such an analysis will likely require multidisciplinary expertise (including from international law, international relations, sociology, social movement studies, political science, economics and finance, etc.), and will need to draw on a range of methods. Moreover, lessons can – and should – be learned from similar cases in the past, such as the aftermath of the Nuclear Weapons (ICJ) and Responsibilities and obligations of States sponsoring persons and entities with respect to activities in the Area (ITLOS) advisory opinions.
Programme:

18.15-18.20 Introduction by Prof. Jorge Viñuales (University of Cambridge)

18.20-19.10 Roundtable with the following speakers:

  • Dr. Joana Setzer (LSE)
  • Mr. Harj Narulla (Doughty Street Chambers)
  • Prof. Lavanya Rajamani (University of Oxford)
  • Prof. Lisa Vanhala (UCL)
  • Dr. Ian Higham (LSE)

19.10-19.30 Q&A with audience

19.30 Closing by Prof. Harro van Asselt (University of Cambridge)
Location: Rooms SG1/SG2, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Rd, Cambridge & online

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Alison Richard Building (Rooms SG1/SG2), 7 West Road, Cambridge, United Kingdom

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